PrincessOfThieves wrote: »This, to me, just shows how much of this discourse is American-centric.
In every time period and culture there were people who felt that they don't fit traditional gender roles and who didn't want to be assigned to a certain gender. Including these people in stories and generally raising awareness about their experiences is a good thing in my opinion and it can add more depth to a story.
But the modern "nonbinary" thing seems very American in how it is built around pronouns and such. It seems somewhat limiting and arbitrary. Which is ironic considering that it is supposed to be liberating.
As a Finn, I'm more confused by she/her and he/him. They/them makes more sense as Finnish has no gendered pronouns. We use "hän" and "se" which are equivalent to they/them and it/its, respectively. We usually call everyone an "it" and it's normal. Trying to remember the correct gendered pronoun has always been an issue to me in English and I usually default to they/them to play it safe if I get confused. I misgender my male and female characters by accident due to this all the time! I will never understand gendered pronouns.
ArchangelIsraphel wrote: »I can see this happening in the TES world, actually. As much as I like the feeling of refuge TES provides, I agree with Syldras in that it is unrealistic for a fantasy world to be completely devoid of homophobic practices, especially where nobility and the desire for an heir is concerned. Which touches on misogyny as well, when it comes down to it. Expecting a woman to marry a certain man in order to have an heir with the "correct lineage" is absolutely something that would, and does happen in this world. I've touched on these subjects myself in my own, private (Non TES) writing, because they are absolutely issues within hierarchical societies and cultures where nobility desires control over the future of finances or a kingdom.
ArchangelIsraphel wrote: »Of course, I do not condone these practices (I wish it weren't necessary to constantly assure the outside world of this)
ArchangelIsraphel wrote: »I can, however, also see Tamriel developing ways for LGBTQ+ couples to have children, through developments in magic and the world's version of science. I don't think it's a stretch to imagine that this issue could be resolved, for some couples at least, through having a surrogate mother or a male donor, if they wanted to have children.
And since we've seen through Alchemy's portrayal that it is not impossible for other races to use magic in order to appear as they wish, why couldn't we have LGBTQ+ characters with unique ways of expressing their identities which involve using magic to change or shift their shape in accordance to their mental and emotional needs?
PrincessOfThieves wrote: »SteveCampsOut wrote: »You could all just do as I do and ignore their storyline and make your own up in your head. Once their main quest is over, you don't have to deal with the bad writing anymore.
Yeah but it's paid content. Players deserve good content, and calling out subpar writing is just fair.
And LGBT people deserve good representation. Especially in the current political climate, flanderized LGBT characters do more harm than good. These are the kinds of characters grifters will use as a weapon against anything progressive.
I usually don't care to explain anymore. If someone wants to believe I condone everything from forced labour to anthropodermic bibliopegy just because I've written about it, that's their problem, not mine
In the 3rd era, Divayth Fyr clones himself several times. And magically sex-swaps his clones to female to build his own harem without having to deal with other people (either that or he just finds himself very awesome)... I don't think the cloning is possible in ESO's time, though. Not yet. The cloning process is somehow related to the Blight or corprus disease.
What's true of course is that a fantasy world with magic, souls and also curses and magical accidents of all kinds could provide a lot of background lore for unique LGBT stories. Takes creativity, of course, and real interest in the topic. If it's just about "somehow putting the current topic into the game to look modern" then... well.
ArchangelIsraphel wrote: »Wait, what do you mean you don't condone anthropodermic bibliopegy? Uhmn, I mean, of course you don't. Me either!! *casually hides first edition copy of The Humor Of Wood Elves* >.> <.< >.>
ArchangelIsraphel wrote: »I hadn't run across that piece of lore about Divayth Fyr yet, but I am somehow unsurprised that he decided on that particular path XD That is a very interesting nugget of lore, however, especially considering that the Telvanni are willing to experiment in ways that aren't necessarily ethical, leading to a whole host of other questions and issues that could be used as a plot device.
a vocal subsect of the community has voiced outrage and spouted transphobic abuse, justifying their anger by saying that Tanlorin's inclusion is 'immersion breaking' and that they supposedly 'don't fit into the world of Elder Scrolls'.
And that's not even mentioning alchemy, the three Living Gods of the Tribunal, or the Daedric Princes who can appear as any gender they so desire!
Slavicsek stresses that designing a new character like Tanlorin is a team effort, and so he worked closely with VO lead Rebecca Ichnoski "to make sure we match actors to the characters they play very meticulously". And so, getting a non-binary actor to play the role of Tanlorin was "extremely important". Having that representation is likewise vital behind the scenes so as to authentically bring to life characters such as Tanlorin with care and intimacy.
So, despite all the fury that might be spilling out online, it was a no-brainer to take that a step further with an LGBTQ+ companion.
colossalvoids wrote: »I guess they're forgetting the whole point of representation they're going for, it's not about going against someone or someone's views no matter if you're agreeing or not, if it's "bad or not". This should lead to normalisation, to make people more understanding, to evoke empathy at that. To serve the narrative at best. Not to tick a box, definitely not to make stereotypes into existence and not to make a subset of players displeased over it for any reason be it their opposing views, anger or their care for the subject matter making them even worse critics at that, as it actually matters to them, to exact people you're trying to represent with it.
colossalvoids wrote: »I guess they're forgetting the whole point of representation they're going for, it's not about going against someone or someone's views no matter if you're agreeing or not, if it's "bad or not". This should lead to normalisation, to make people more understanding, to evoke empathy at that. To serve the narrative at best. Not to tick a box, definitely not to make stereotypes into existence and not to make a subset of players displeased over it for any reason be it their opposing views, anger or their care for the subject matter making them even worse critics at that, as it actually matters to them, to exact people you're trying to represent with it.
What makes the whole thing even uglier is the fact that there's even a pressure by now to conform to the expectations to the group, and if you don't conform to the mainstream thinking of the group you're somehow weird, get strange accusations (like being anti-LGBT while being LGBT yourself), or even get othered/ousted from the group altogether. Which is a little ironic considering a part of Tanlorin's story is about being ousted from a community of people because of not conforming to their expectations.
I also think that the belief that people can be neatly seperated into different identity groups that are completely different from each other and weren't able to understand each other (so, for example, a gay character could only be played by a gay actor) doesn't lead to more understanding, tolerance and certainly not normalization, but to the absolute opposite: segregation. And segregation of humans based on inborn factors (like sex, sexual orientation or ethnicity) certainly is not freedom and progressiveness, but the opposite. No matter what they claim.
As a biological female who identifies as non-binary, I say the lgbt representation in all video games is normal and im ok with it. I've seen everywhere especially on world of warcraft, overwatch, league of legends, guild wars 2, and eso. My opinion on this is "companies can do it if they want to or not, it's their game."
I can't speak more on these topics of lgbt representation as it is a controversial topic.
"We have mixed marriages and gay and lesbian characters in abundance throughout the game," Slavicsek tells TheGamer. "It just makes sense to us that all possibilities exist in Tamriel. We treat it as a real and living world. You just might not notice because we don't shout it from the rooftops or put signs proclaiming it everywhere. And you know why? Because in Tamriel, this is just the way the world is.
"No character in the world blinks an eye or thinks there's anything unusual about meeting the baker and his husband, the serving woman and her wife, or to have Naryu and Jakarn flirt with you, regardless of your character's gender. And that's not even mentioning alchemy, the three Living Gods of the Tribunal, or the Daedric Princes who can appear as any gender they so desire! It's part of the world and so it's no big deal."
TheMajority wrote: »"No character in the world blinks an eye or thinks there's anything unusual about meeting the baker and his husband, the serving woman and her wife, or to have Naryu and Jakarn flirt with you, regardless of your character's gender. And that's not even mentioning alchemy, the three Living Gods of the Tribunal, or the Daedric Princes who can appear as any gender they so desire! It's part of the world and so it's no big deal."
Wow. Ok, so, I am really uncomfortable with this statement. Not because of the representation. You give me discomfort because you trying to speak for other character feelings with flirting. You are claiming that no-one in the world bats an eye at getting flirted at with by Naryu and Jakarn. But that's totally ignoring the ace and aromantic community who may be uncomfortable with that happening.
There's also people of other orientations and identities who could still feel discomfort from this too. Gosh, it's not ok to just say "no one blinks an eye at flirting".
I got no problem with the presence of the flirting, but there needs to be a "please stop flirting with me, I don't consent to this" button where the NPC backs off. Not everyone wants romantic attention from fictional characters.
Don't speak for me or the character I play ok?
spartaxoxo wrote: »A lot of people disliked Tanlorin before they ever were released. It's entirely predictable they don't like them now. If Tanlorin is bad it has nothing to do with them being non-binary. The writing in ESO has been pretty mediocre since Blackwood. A character's minority status does not doesn't determine the quality of the story. Sharp and Azandar were "checkbox" characters too, btw. Inclusion is never the reason a story is bad. A talented writer can decide to write a boy and it come out just fine, same with non-binary. There is no default gender. And making a decision on gender does not lead to writing a good or bad story. It's quite often that writing for straight, cisgender characters is bad. The difference is you won't get essays about how The Ascendant Lord being a man is the reason that High Isle was bad. Instead, it will be about things like recycling plots, as it should be.
spartaxoxo wrote: »Sharp and Azandar were "checkbox" characters too, btw.
spartaxoxo wrote: »A lot of people disliked Tanlorin before they ever were released. It's entirely predictable they don't like them now. If Tanlorin is bad it has nothing to do with them being non-binary. The writing in ESO has been pretty mediocre since Blackwood. A character's minority status does not doesn't determine the quality of the story. Sharp and Azandar were "checkbox" characters too, btw. Inclusion is never the reason a story is bad. A talented writer can decide to write a boy and it come out just fine, same with non-binary. There is no default gender. And making a decision on gender does not lead to writing a good or bad story. It's quite often that writing for straight, cisgender characters is bad. The difference is you won't get essays about how The Ascendant Lord being a man is the reason that High Isle was bad. Instead, it will be about things like recycling plots, as it should be.
TheMajority wrote: »spartaxoxo wrote: »A lot of people disliked Tanlorin before they ever were released. It's entirely predictable they don't like them now. If Tanlorin is bad it has nothing to do with them being non-binary. The writing in ESO has been pretty mediocre since Blackwood. A character's minority status does not doesn't determine the quality of the story. Sharp and Azandar were "checkbox" characters too, btw. Inclusion is never the reason a story is bad. A talented writer can decide to write a boy and it come out just fine, same with non-binary. There is no default gender. And making a decision on gender does not lead to writing a good or bad story. It's quite often that writing for straight, cisgender characters is bad. The difference is you won't get essays about how The Ascendant Lord being a man is the reason that High Isle was bad. Instead, it will be about things like recycling plots, as it should be.
i think it becomes a problem when the minorities that the checkboxes are being checked for are being made to feel uncomfortable, unrepresented and voiceless because a character is being written as a stereotype first and not as a character. saying that LGBTQ+ people (which a ton of these posts are from) should not be concerned with that is like telling them that you don't want to see the lived experience and feelings. which is what a lot of us have been told all throughout our living.
inclusion done badly can be the reason a story is bad, because the people meant to feel included don't, and it's just as bad as not inclusion.
i have a belief that straight and cisgender individuals are also represented poorly in story telling and that it's a problem to always shove them into a certain dynamic thought of to be typical or "normal" so yeah, actually, a story can be bad because of that too. id welcome to have a unmoderated talk about that with all these these intelligent forum goers some time.
i don't wanna sound like i speak for every LGBTQ+ person cause i don't but everybody of every orientation is allowed to critic representation done badly
spartaxoxo wrote: »Sharp and Azandar were "checkbox" characters too, btw.
spartaxoxo wrote: »TheMajority wrote: »spartaxoxo wrote: »A lot of people disliked Tanlorin before they ever were released. It's entirely predictable they don't like them now. If Tanlorin is bad it has nothing to do with them being non-binary. The writing in ESO has been pretty mediocre since Blackwood. A character's minority status does not doesn't determine the quality of the story. Sharp and Azandar were "checkbox" characters too, btw. Inclusion is never the reason a story is bad. A talented writer can decide to write a boy and it come out just fine, same with non-binary. There is no default gender. And making a decision on gender does not lead to writing a good or bad story. It's quite often that writing for straight, cisgender characters is bad. The difference is you won't get essays about how The Ascendant Lord being a man is the reason that High Isle was bad. Instead, it will be about things like recycling plots, as it should be.
i think it becomes a problem when the minorities that the checkboxes are being checked for are being made to feel uncomfortable, unrepresented and voiceless because a character is being written as a stereotype first and not as a character. saying that LGBTQ+ people (which a ton of these posts are from) should not be concerned with that is like telling them that you don't want to see the lived experience and feelings. which is what a lot of us have been told all throughout our living.
inclusion done badly can be the reason a story is bad, because the people meant to feel included don't, and it's just as bad as not inclusion.
i have a belief that straight and cisgender individuals are also represented poorly in story telling and that it's a problem to always shove them into a certain dynamic thought of to be typical or "normal" so yeah, actually, a story can be bad because of that too. id welcome to have a unmoderated talk about that with all these these intelligent forum goers some time.
i don't wanna sound like i speak for every LGBTQ+ person cause i don't but everybody of every orientation is allowed to critic representation done badly
Sure. If a character is just a bad stereotype, that can suck. And if someone wants to call out a specific stereotype, that's perfectly fine.
But that's not what is happening when backlash against a character starts before anyone has even seen the character and knows nothing about the character except that it's a minority.
And even when a stereotypical writing is presen, it is not because they decided that character is a minority that it sucks. It sucks because the writer did not do their due diligence in ensuring authenticity and instead relied on stereotypes. Which is a dramatically different claim than saying things like real world identities don't belong in the Elder Scrolls, that non-binary characters should not be included, and that the character is bad because they made a decision to be inclusive. All of which was voiced before anyone had even gotten a chance to play Tanlorin's story.
And there exists prejudiced views towards non-binary people even within other types of people in the LGBT community.
ArchangelIsraphel wrote: »spartaxoxo wrote: »Sharp and Azandar were "checkbox" characters too, btw.
I'm not sure I follow this line of thinking in regards to these two characters. Nothing about them was a blatant stereotype. They were original takes on individual people. They weren't written as advertisements for their various aspects. Those things were just a part of the whole.
Side note that Sharp's quest was one of the few that genuinely made me cry my eyes out, because he felt like a genuine individual suffering from trauma. Didn't feel a thing about Tanlorin, which really was a deep disappointment, because I wanted to feel a connection to them
TheMajority wrote: »spartaxoxo wrote: »TheMajority wrote: »spartaxoxo wrote: »A lot of people disliked Tanlorin before they ever were released. It's entirely predictable they don't like them now. If Tanlorin is bad it has nothing to do with them being non-binary. The writing in ESO has been pretty mediocre since Blackwood. A character's minority status does not doesn't determine the quality of the story. Sharp and Azandar were "checkbox" characters too, btw. Inclusion is never the reason a story is bad. A talented writer can decide to write a boy and it come out just fine, same with non-binary. There is no default gender. And making a decision on gender does not lead to writing a good or bad story. It's quite often that writing for straight, cisgender characters is bad. The difference is you won't get essays about how The Ascendant Lord being a man is the reason that High Isle was bad. Instead, it will be about things like recycling plots, as it should be.
i think it becomes a problem when the minorities that the checkboxes are being checked for are being made to feel uncomfortable, unrepresented and voiceless because a character is being written as a stereotype first and not as a character. saying that LGBTQ+ people (which a ton of these posts are from) should not be concerned with that is like telling them that you don't want to see the lived experience and feelings. which is what a lot of us have been told all throughout our living.
inclusion done badly can be the reason a story is bad, because the people meant to feel included don't, and it's just as bad as not inclusion.
i have a belief that straight and cisgender individuals are also represented poorly in story telling and that it's a problem to always shove them into a certain dynamic thought of to be typical or "normal" so yeah, actually, a story can be bad because of that too. id welcome to have a unmoderated talk about that with all these these intelligent forum goers some time.
i don't wanna sound like i speak for every LGBTQ+ person cause i don't but everybody of every orientation is allowed to critic representation done badly
Sure. If a character is just a bad stereotype, that can suck. And if someone wants to call out a specific stereotype, that's perfectly fine.
But that's not what is happening when backlash against a character starts before anyone has even seen the character and knows nothing about the character except that it's a minority.
And even when a stereotypical writing is presen, it is not because they decided that character is a minority that it sucks. It sucks because the writer did not do their due diligence in ensuring authenticity and instead relied on stereotypes. Which is a dramatically different claim than saying things like real world identities don't belong in the Elder Scrolls, that non-binary characters should not be included, and that the character is bad because they made a decision to be inclusive. All of which was voiced before anyone had even gotten a chance to play Tanlorin's story.
And there exists prejudiced views towards non-binary people even within other types of people in the LGBT community.
but that ain't what this thread is about? nobody here even said real world identities didn't belong in TES, we said do it better, and enhance it with the lore instead of making it feel like a photocopy of US based non-binary represent
this is a thread reviewing the quest after it's done, you're pulling in here stuff from before and from other threads, which nobody here was even saying?
spartaxoxo wrote: »They were created first and foremost with the idea they wanted a boy. They were created to fulfill a checkbox. They do have fantastic, non-stereotypical stories. Because the writer cared to do so.
The issue is never "we decided we wanted to make a character of x gender." The issue is always bad writing. The difference is that people understand this when it comes to characters that aren't minorities.
spartaxoxo wrote: »ArchangelIsraphel wrote: »spartaxoxo wrote: »Sharp and Azandar were "checkbox" characters too, btw.
I'm not sure I follow this line of thinking in regards to these two characters. Nothing about them was a blatant stereotype. They were original takes on individual people. They weren't written as advertisements for their various aspects. Those things were just a part of the whole.
Side note that Sharp's quest was one of the few that genuinely made me cry my eyes out, because he felt like a genuine individual suffering from trauma. Didn't feel a thing about Tanlorin, which really was a deep disappointment, because I wanted to feel a connection to them
They were created first and foremost with the idea they wanted a boy. They were created to fulfill a checkbox. They do have fantastic, non-stereotypical stories. Because the writer cared to do so.
The issue is never "we decided we wanted to make a character of x gender." The issue is always bad writing. The difference is that people understand this when it comes to characters that aren't minorities.
They can point to bad stereotypes such as "he's just a stupid Meathead with no depth" for a male example (not saying sharp or azandar are Meatheads) without saying "The problem with this character is that the authors just had to have a man. They are just checking boxes to pander to men." The same is not true for minority characters. If a minority characters is poorly written with thin stereotypes people blame the minority status and the minority audience. It's because they wanted to pander to us and decided to include a minority, not because the writer phoned it in with a wooden character.
And I have seen this type of rhetoric constantly from preview images and trailers, before literally anything else is known about the character. The same thing happened with Tanlorin. There were videos calling Elder Scrolls woke and DEI and a post calling Tanlorin garbage before the PTS even launched. Using all the same buzzwords and rhetoric.
I also want to add that while plenty of people don’t like the character for being nonbinary, there’s also a problem with revealing them as “this is our new >>>> NONBINARY <<<< companion! >>>THEY<<< are >>>>NONBINARY<<<< !!!!” People are more than their gender, and eso already has a reputation as having really good representation.
ArchangelIsraphel wrote: »spartaxoxo wrote: »ArchangelIsraphel wrote: »spartaxoxo wrote: »Sharp and Azandar were "checkbox" characters too, btw.
I'm not sure I follow this line of thinking in regards to these two characters. Nothing about them was a blatant stereotype. They were original takes on individual people. They weren't written as advertisements for their various aspects. Those things were just a part of the whole.
Side note that Sharp's quest was one of the few that genuinely made me cry my eyes out, because he felt like a genuine individual suffering from trauma. Didn't feel a thing about Tanlorin, which really was a deep disappointment, because I wanted to feel a connection to them
They were created first and foremost with the idea they wanted a boy. They were created to fulfill a checkbox. They do have fantastic, non-stereotypical stories. Because the writer cared to do so.
The issue is never "we decided we wanted to make a character of x gender." The issue is always bad writing. The difference is that people understand this when it comes to characters that aren't minorities.
They can point to bad stereotypes such as "he's just a stupid Meathead with no depth" for a male example (not saying sharp or azandar are Meatheads) without saying "The problem with this character is that the authors just had to have a man. They are just checking boxes to pander to men." The same is not true for minority characters. If a minority characters is poorly written with thin stereotypes people blame the minority status and the minority audience. It's because they wanted to pander to us and decided to include a minority, not because the writer phoned it in with a wooden character.
And I have seen this type of rhetoric constantly from preview images and trailers, before literally anything else is known about the character. The same thing happened with Tanlorin. There were videos calling Elder Scrolls woke and DEI and a post calling Tanlorin garbage before the PTS even launched. Using all the same buzzwords and rhetoric.
I mean, I'm not denying that these things definitely happened before Tanlorin was released, because I saw a lot of it in spite of being away from the game and the forums for a while, but there was also valid criticism from concerned members of the LGBTQ+ community as well.
Admittedly, I'm also quite confused by the fact that you continue to reiterate that people are blaming the minorities and the minority audiences, when that hasn't happened at all within this thread, to my knowledge, unless I missed something early on. I don't think that's the OP's intention either. Or are you just justifying the opinions held within the article? Genuinely trying to understand your perspective and where it's coming from.
The reviews here really are not blaming the fact that Tanlorin is non-binary, they are blaming the wooden, stereotyped writing. Some of us are also really concerned that homophobia and transphobia is getting introduced into the game as a plot device, albeit metaphorically, when such things did not previously exist in this universe, and we don't want to be faced with that in a game world where we feel safe, and welcomed. (I don't want to speak for every ones feelings, either, but this has been a common sentiment throughout the thread.)
spartaxoxo wrote: »A lot of people disliked Tanlorin before they ever were released. It's entirely predictable they don't like them now. The dev was right about the rhetoric around their release.
If Tanlorin is bad it has nothing to do with them being non-binary. The writing in ESO has been pretty mediocre since Blackwood. A character's minority status does not doesn't determine the quality of the story. Sharp and Azandar were "checkbox" characters too, btw. Inclusion is never the reason a story is bad. A talented writer can decide to write a boy and it come out just fine, same with non-binary. There is no default gender. And making a decision on gender does not lead to writing a good or bad story. It's quite often that writing for straight, cisgender characters is bad. The difference is you won't get essays about how The Ascendant Lord being a man is the reason that High Isle was bad. Instead, it will be about things like recycling plots, as it should be.
Thin, shallow characters exist for the all the different demos, be it race, gender, or sexuality. It will be nice when minority characters are also allowed to be mediocre.
spartaxoxo wrote: »ArchangelIsraphel wrote: »spartaxoxo wrote: »ArchangelIsraphel wrote: »spartaxoxo wrote: »Sharp and Azandar were "checkbox" characters too, btw.
I'm not sure I follow this line of thinking in regards to these two characters. Nothing about them was a blatant stereotype. They were original takes on individual people. They weren't written as advertisements for their various aspects. Those things were just a part of the whole.
Side note that Sharp's quest was one of the few that genuinely made me cry my eyes out, because he felt like a genuine individual suffering from trauma. Didn't feel a thing about Tanlorin, which really was a deep disappointment, because I wanted to feel a connection to them
They were created first and foremost with the idea they wanted a boy. They were created to fulfill a checkbox. They do have fantastic, non-stereotypical stories. Because the writer cared to do so.
The issue is never "we decided we wanted to make a character of x gender." The issue is always bad writing. The difference is that people understand this when it comes to characters that aren't minorities.
They can point to bad stereotypes such as "he's just a stupid Meathead with no depth" for a male example (not saying sharp or azandar are Meatheads) without saying "The problem with this character is that the authors just had to have a man. They are just checking boxes to pander to men." The same is not true for minority characters. If a minority characters is poorly written with thin stereotypes people blame the minority status and the minority audience. It's because they wanted to pander to us and decided to include a minority, not because the writer phoned it in with a wooden character.
And I have seen this type of rhetoric constantly from preview images and trailers, before literally anything else is known about the character. The same thing happened with Tanlorin. There were videos calling Elder Scrolls woke and DEI and a post calling Tanlorin garbage before the PTS even launched. Using all the same buzzwords and rhetoric.
I mean, I'm not denying that these things definitely happened before Tanlorin was released, because I saw a lot of it in spite of being away from the game and the forums for a while, but there was also valid criticism from concerned members of the LGBTQ+ community as well.
Admittedly, I'm also quite confused by the fact that you continue to reiterate that people are blaming the minorities and the minority audiences, when that hasn't happened at all within this thread, to my knowledge, unless I missed something early on. I don't think that's the OP's intention either. Or are you just justifying the opinions held within the article? Genuinely trying to understand your perspective and where it's coming from.
The reviews here really are not blaming the fact that Tanlorin is non-binary, they are blaming the wooden, stereotyped writing. Some of us are also really concerned that homophobia and transphobia is getting introduced into the game as a plot device, albeit metaphorically, when such things did not previously exist in this universe, and we don't want to be faced with that in a game world where we feel safe, and welcomed. (I don't want to speak for every ones feelings, either, but this has been a common sentiment throughout the thread.)
I am mostly focused on the sentiment dismissing what the developer had to say in the article. Everything the developer said was legitimate and there was a lot of backlash against Tanlorin for being non-binary.