Kingender

Kingender is a gender identity related to ones kintype. A kintype (or otherkin) relates to a non-human identification, like if one relates to plants and the spiritual, mental, and emotional conotations that come with that.

The kingender experience is different for everyone. Some expamples of what kingenders may experience are:


 * a change in gender when they kinshift (Kingenderfluid)
 * the experience of being a certain gender because of your identity (e.g. a dragonkin knowing they wouldn't be female if they weren't dragonkin)
 * Identifying as a xenogender related to your intype

The identity is exclusive to those who identify as Otherkin, because the gender of people who identify as kingender is intertwined with their non-human identity. If you are not otherkin, you cannot be kingender as you do not experience a key part of this identity.

History
Kingender was coined was coined on or before July 25, 2014 by Tumblr user sadvaporwavebabe and posted to MOGAI-Archive.

Flags
The kingender flag was coined by Deviantart user Pastelmemer and was posted by Deviantart user Pride-Flags on September 7th, 2015. It has no confirmed meaning. The second was coined by a user who has chosen to go by Adora in January 6th, 2021 at the request of FANDOM user Vkgfjlmvfjkvmfkgvfk. Light gold represents mythical beings, yellow represents fictional characters/beings and conceptual beings (such as musickin), light pink represents prehistoric beings, dark pink represents land-related beings, pale purple represents having multiple kingenders, dark purple represents multi-dwelling beings (ex: a frog that lives in water and on land), light blue represents aquatic beings, and dark blue represents flying or sky-based beings. The humanoid design represents ones outward body, and the black represents feeling misplaced or knowing your body does not fit your true identity.

Resources

 * 1) https://www.deviantart.com/pride-flags/art/Kingender-1-558940092
 * 2) https://lgbta.wikia.org/f/p/4400000000000075168/r/4400000000000162746
 * 3) http://archive.is/uEbAK#selection-373.0-373.16