Life & Culture / NewsLife & Culture / NewsTake the Big Dazed Sex SurveyThe way young people relate to sex is changing – tell us how you feel about it in our anonymous new surveyShareLink copied ✔️August 10, 2022Life & CultureNewsAugust 10, 2022Text Serena Smith Illustration Jethro Nepomuceno From growing interest in non-monogamy, to the rise of OnlyFans, to the exciting possibilities presented by the metaverse, the way young people have sex is changing at lightning pace. No two people will feel exactly the same about sex though, which is why we’re launching our very own Dazed Sex Survey to dig into the details of our current sex landscape. Our last sex survey from 2014 yielded some fascinating findings, but now we want to know how things have changed since then. We want to know all your sexy secrets – have you ever have had sex on drugs? Filmed your own porno? Hooked up with a robot? Tell us all the gory details. It’s completely anonymous too, so you can fess up to your most X-rated fantasies worry-free. Your secrets are safe with us. We’ll be publishing the results in a few weeks’ time and formulating a picture of the state of sex today using the data collected from the survey. It’ll be fascinating, but mostly, it’ll be fun. If you’re up for getting involved, you can take the survey here – it takes less than five minutes to complete. TrendingThe rise of the intellectual tattooFrom spiritual flowcharts to psychological models, diagrams are increasingly becoming a tattoo choice – but what exactly do they signify?BeautyBeauty10 of the hottest Instagram accounts fusing art, sex and erotica Nike FashionNike celebrates the culture of soccer ahead of a summer shaped by the gameLife & CultureWhy so many young people are training to be death doulasBeautyThe sexiest flesh-baring Instagram accounts you need to followBeauty‘I can’t even be bothered to masturbate’: Ozempic and the death of desireFilm & TV7 sex worker-approved films about sex workBeautyNude awakening: Meet the young people embracing naturismBeautyDirty Girls: The cult 90s documentary that made being dirty feel radical