I did, and they said that there are only two types of gametes in humans. Male gametes and female gametes. That's it. No other types. Binary.
nostr:npub1rkc386aldh9p28pfw87guc0r0rft9j2mtvpf0zdfjm4y0fm469hs6cy8dq nostr:npub19llaw9thx3qf5n3zge0sadkehftrmxr9rkjcrgf5jywjzh29g72slknvrx nostr:npub1v9qy0ry6uyh36z65pe790qrxfye84ydsgzc877armmwr2l9tpkjsdx9q3h sex is not binary. There are dozens of generic variants both in humans and throughout the animal kingdom. If you spent 5 minutes talking to a geneticist you would learn this.
Discussion
nostr:npub1rkc386aldh9p28pfw87guc0r0rft9j2mtvpf0zdfjm4y0fm469hs6cy8dq nostr:npub19llaw9thx3qf5n3zge0sadkehftrmxr9rkjcrgf5jywjzh29g72slknvrx nostr:npub1v9qy0ry6uyh36z65pe790qrxfye84ydsgzc877armmwr2l9tpkjsdx9q3h I highly doubt that because then how do you explain women and men that are intersex? With androgen insensitivity?
All that intersex means is that it is not straightforward to work out from a casual inspection of external genitalia what the sex of the subject is. They still only have one sex (producing either male gametes or female gametes), and this sex is determined by their chromosomal makeup.