A Little About
Sexed Wikipedia
Sexed Wikipedia is a free, sex-positive educational wiki built for the curious of all kinds. We exist to make honest, judgment-free information about intimacy, relationships, and sexual wellness easy to find, easy to read, and free to access for anyone, anywhere. No sign-ups, no paywalls, no awkwardness.
184+
Wiki articles published
5
Main topic series
5
Editorial contributors
2025
Online since
Our Story
& Mission.
Sexed Wikipedia was created for a simple reason: to make sex-positive information genuinely easy to find, written human-to-human rather than buried under dense medical jargon, complex research papers, or articles where the actual point gets lost in a thousand words of preamble.
There are hundreds of well-curated resources online, built by educators, brands, organisations, and communities, and each does meaningful work in its own corner. But sometimes a smaller, less formal voice can make a bigger difference than a well-known name. Where some brands focus on the materials behind their toys, others on a single subject, and LGBTQ+ communities deeply on pride and identity topics, we wanted to think a little bigger. Sexed Wikipedia brings a wide range of related subjects together under one roof, so you can move freely between topics without bouncing across a dozen different sites.
We believe the answers to the questions you were too awkward to ask should be just a search away, written warmly, plainly, and without judgement. Whether you are exploring a topic for the first time, filling in gaps in your understanding, or simply curious, you are welcome here.
A Quiet Editorial Team
Our team prefers to work behind the curtains, not to hide, but because the work matters more than the names behind it. Sex-positive topics still carry stigma in many parts of the world, and we would rather focus on the content than the contributors. Every member of our small editorial collective has a full-time job and a life outside of Sexed Wikipedia. For the sake of our privacy, our families, and the careers we have built, we choose to stay quietly in the background. This is a side project from a group of like-minded people who simply believe better sex education should exist, and that is enough of a reason to keep it going.
What's Next
This is only the beginning. We launched with five carefully chosen main topic series, Fetishes & Kinks, Sex Games, Sexual Identity, Sex Toy Materials, and Sex Around The World, but a much broader library is already in the works. Our planned series include Intimate Life, Relationships, Sex Education, Health & STI, Pleasure Toys Categorisation, Essential Information, and many more we cannot wait to roll out.
We are growing gradually and intentionally, focusing on two or three main topics at a time. Once a series feels properly covered, we move onto the next. Quality over quantity, always, and always with the same goal: making honest, useful, judgment-free information available to anyone who needs it.
How We
Work
Every article on Sexed Wikipedia goes through a careful process before it goes live. Research, cross-checking, editing, and a final read for clarity. We pull from peer-reviewed studies, established sex educators, trusted health organisations, and reputable industry sources, then translate everything into plain English so anyone can follow along.
We try to update the wiki weekly, sometimes more often when life allows, sometimes a little less. Articles are reviewed and refreshed over time as new information emerges or topics evolve. If a subject is contested, sensitive, or still being figured out by researchers, we say so plainly. We would rather be honest about uncertainty than pretend it does not exist.
Our writing principles are simple: be clear, be inclusive, be human. No clickbait, no algorithm-led padding, no preachy disclaimers stuffing every paragraph. Just useful information, written like one curious person explaining something to another. If you ever spot a mistake, broken link, or a topic that needs sharpening, please let us know. Reader feedback genuinely helps us improve.