Skip to content

Utah Assassin’s Alleged Sick Furry Fetish: Porn Games and Pedophile Art Uncovered

comment-1 Created with Sketch Beta.

These people are sick.

Tyler Robinson, the 22-year-old accused of gunning down conservative firebrand Charlie Kirk, wallowed in a cesspool of depravity that would make your skin crawl.

A shocking Daily Mail report rips the veil off Robinson’s twisted online world, exposing his obsession with pornographic "furry" games and ties to artists peddling filth that glorifies pedophilia.

Charlie Kirk assassin Tyler Robinson reportedly played pornographic “furry” games online.

Robinson, under the alias "craftin247," immersed himself in the "furry" subculture, a bizarre community fixated on sexualized anthropomorphic animal characters.

His Steam profile reveals he played "Furry Shades of Gay," a dating simulator that brags about "love, queer relationships, hot gay sex and slapstick humor," according to the Daily Mail.

Robinson’s account shows he downloaded and played a dating simulator called “Furry Shades of Gay.”

Robinson was so hooked he earned a prize: a digital sticker of a cat-human dressed as a French maid.

This wasn’t a casual dalliance—he dove headfirst into this perverse world.

His FurAffinity.net account, a hub for furry fetishists, shows he recently viewed content by "RedRusker," an artist notorious for gay furry porn.

RedRusker admitted in a May 2023 post, "there are about a dozen or so pieces" of his art that "depicted underage characters."

Robinson reportedly engaged in the fringe “furry” subculture.

He claimed, "I felt guilty as f—k” and vowed, “I won’t draw it again,” but the Mail reports he still churns out cartoons featuring younger-looking characters in explicit acts.

One depraved image shows a dog character performing a sex act on a horse.

Robinson’s connections don’t end there.

He was chummy with “Obure,” another artist crafting furry content and grotesque images of obese women being force-fed.

In January 2024, Robinson commented on Obure’s Steam profile, "he beats me when mom goes on her work trips," punctuated with a crying emoji — a chilling glimpse into his psyche or a sick joke.

Obure’s profile, flaunting cartoon furries and a photo of a young man in cat ears, ties him to Minnesota and a DeviantArt account, "SirEdwardThe3rd," filled with feederism fetish comics.

On September 10, Robinson allegedly climbed a rooftop at Utah Valley University and shot Kirk in the neck, killing the 31-year-old conservative icon before thousands.

A spent cartridge bore the inscription "Notices, bulge, OwO what’s this?" — a furry meme tied to a wide-eyed cat emoticon, mocking the gravity of his crime.

Robinson, romantically linked to his transgender roommate, faces seven felony charges, including aggravated murder, with prosecutors seeking the death penalty.

 Furries attend AnthroCon 2023, one of the largest anthropomorphic conventions.

Meanwhile, a man named Zinn, who falsely claimed responsibility for Kirk’s murder to mislead law enforcement, has his own sordid history.

Court records from 2018 reveal Zinn’s conviction for possession of child pornography, with authorities uncovering over 200 explicit images of minors on his devices.

He served three years in prison and remains on a federal sex offender registry.

Zinn's attempt to derail the investigation into Kirk’s death only deepened the tragedy’s grim web.

From bullet casings etched with sick jokes to artists openly admitting to "underage" drawings, the depravity is staggering.

Kirk’s assassination, fueled by this toxic brew of ideology and obsession, demands we confront the monsters lurking in plain sight. These people are sick—and their sickness is spreading.

Alicia Powe

Alicia is an investigative journalist and breaking news reporter with RiftTV. Alicia's work is featured on outlets including The Gateway Pundit, Project Veritas, Townhall and Media Research Center.

Conversation

Comments

Sponsored