Berrisexuality is an emerging micro-label used by people who experience attraction to all genders but feel a noticeably stronger or more frequent pull toward women, feminine-aligned, and androgynous individuals. It describes a pattern where attraction isn’t limited, but where one direction consistently feels more natural or resonant.
For many who use the term, attraction to men or masculine-aligned people is still present—it’s simply lighter, rarer, or less central. This imbalance may have been felt for years, lingering in the background even when broader labels seemed to fit on the surface.
Traditional identities like bisexual or pansexual can sometimes feel too wide or too even, as if they flatten the nuances of someone’s real preferences. For people whose attraction isn’t symmetrical, those broader labels can feel both accurate and incomplete.
Online spaces, especially Reddit discussions and queer-oriented wikis, have become hubs for people discovering berrisexuality for the first time. Many describe an unexpected sense of recognition, as if the term finally reflected a part of themselves they could never clearly articulate.
One user described the relief of finding language that didn’t force a choice or a binary: “Now I don’t have to pick,” they wrote. “Berri fits like a glove.” For them, the label didn’t restrict identity— it clarified it.