Yep, yeah, I don't know how I missed that. Preeeeeetty embarrassing. Definitely the kind of thing that would keep me up at night if it had happened IRL.
BumpingFuglies
Man, I thought I'd found my people in this community, but my perfectly civil comment discussing scientific definitions of 'sex' was removed. That shows that this is likely just another echo chamber that can't abide civil conversation around scientific facts when said facts make people feel icky.
The worst part is I'm on your side. I'm all in on inclusivity and representation. I'm trans. I'm bisexual. I'm just open-minded, seemingly unlike whichever mod removed my comment.
You, apotheotic, seem civil enough. I was looking forward to discussing biological sex with you, maybe expanding my understanding in the process, but it's not worth trying to have a conversation if I have to worry about my responses being unceremoniously removed. For what it's worth, your reply has inspired me to do some more reading on the subject.
Reddit mod practices seem to have bled into every corner of Lemmy. Community: blocked. Good riddance.
Eek, this reads like a white person getting upset about someone using "black" instead of "African American"
Who's being excluded here? My suggestion was to change 'sex' in video game character creation to 'apparent sex.'
Technically there is an extremely small amount of people born as both sexes (intersex), but they tend to have appearances that favor one sex over the other, so from a game development perspective, they're covered by having two sex options.
To me, the obvious answer is to do away with the concept of "gender" altogether. It's a societal construct that doesn't really need to exist in video game character creation, anyway.
Everybody is born one of two biological sexes: male or female. There. Those are your choices. Call it "apparent sex" and include a pronoun option to allow for players who want to roleplay gender nonconforming characters.
Gestures broadly
Cold, actually.
I don't know the game well - never played its original release and I likely won't play this remake - but from what I understand, the women in question are zombies, so consent isn't really a factor.
If anything, removing this feature slightly reduces immersion and significantly changes the main character's personality. I can understand why someone who was a fan of the original would be hesitant to get the remake, since the main character is a different person, morally speaking.
It's like Star Wars - Han shot first, and changing that doesn't change the story in any real way, but it significantly changes Han's character.
This is the most succinct, unbiased explanation I've seen for this change. Thank you for this! It's good to know there's an unintended security improvement in their otherwise brazen attempt to kill ad blockers on Chrome.
Fuck Google.
$14 billion. That's actually pretty hefty. Go, EU regulators! Do what my regulatory-captured country won't!