- Aug 5, 2018
- 23,639
- 382,174
I didn't want this game
Questing....Guy turns Girl and gets pounded by everyone, isn't that gay?
Questing....Guy turns Girl and gets pounded by everyone, isn't that gay?
Except genderbend games with guy turn girl have been around since decades.This game seems to scream wokeness 2022...
Someone just discovered Yu Yu Hakusho.One day while trying to save a child from the street, he was struck by a vehicle...
Ranma came out in fucking 1987, genderbending has been a trope in japan for a long time.This game seems to scream wokeness 2022...
The answer is yes.I didn't want this game
Questing....Guy turns Girl and gets pounded by everyone, isn't that gay?
That's a question, not an answer. Or "answered".so... It's gay or not?
The answered is: Does it matter?
thanks for this just startet allready at episode 6Someone just discovered Yu Yu Hakusho.
Top Tier Anime. If you haven't seen it I can't recommend it enough.
For close to a decade, in the anime community outside of Japan. Roughly around SAO is when the isekai genre exploded for Western audiences, though there are earlier examples, like .Hack// (the anime was earlier, at any rate). More of a recent phenomenon, with Log Horizon, Konosuba, Overlord and so on, but it's been around in Japan for a while, around 40 years, though there's also Japanese myths a bit like it that go back centuries. There are also somewhat similar Western stories, like Peter Pan or Alice in Wonderland where characters are transported from our world to some other fantastical one. Safe to say, that genre has existed for a long time and only resurfaced through anime, basically. The truck part/dying is specifically anime, though. Maybe also in some Korean or Chinese light novels, but that's more because of the rise in popularity of the anime genre, I believe.Has that ever been so much of a trope? Or is it just becoming one lately?
I mean, the fantasy scenario of sex-change via spell/sci-fi tech shenanigans/reincarnation/etc of a person whose sex and gender initially matched and now don't, doesn't really have anything to do with "modern times". The closest real-life analog would be fucking a trans person who hasn't actually started transitioning yet (like, not even dressing as their true gender) and I think you'd have to look a long time to find someone who would call that gay. (Assuming your sex is the opposite of theirs, of course.)So is that gay if you're a dude who is actually a girl and getting fucked by other dudes?
Or is that gay if you're fucking a girl who is actually a dude?
God, modern times are so confusing
Right, the literal meaning of isekai is just "another world", so on that basis it's synonymous with "portal fantasy" i.e. The Chronicles of Narnia, A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court, and a lot of older anime like Fushigi Yuugi and Inu Yasha. Calling any of those an isekai wouldn't feel right though, because of all the additional baggage the term has picked up, like the "other world" running on video game (specifically RPG) logic.For close to a decade, in the anime community outside of Japan. Roughly around SAO is when the isekai genre exploded for Western audiences, though there are earlier examples, like .Hack// (the anime was earlier, at any rate). More of a recent phenomenon, with Log Horizon, Konosuba, Overlord and so on, but it's been around in Japan for a while, around 40 years, though there's also Japanese myths a bit like it that go back centuries. There are also somewhat similar Western stories, like Peter Pan or Alice in Wonderland where characters are transported from our world to some other fantastical one. Safe to say, that genre has existed for a long time and only resurfaced through anime, basically. The truck part/dying is specifically anime, though. Maybe also in some Korean or Chinese light novels, but that's more because of the rise in popularity of the anime genre, I believe.
That's not what I said and not what I meant.There are also somewhat similar Western stories, like Peter Pan or Alice in Wonderland where characters are transported from our world to some other fantastical one.