But then, i'm not surprised. She has a hate boner against straight men, like the first scene where you are forced to make a promise to that bitch...as if being a straight man means, that by default, you don't care about consent...she is the toxic kind of feminist no one needs, as opposed to Katie and co.
And in all honesty, that's such an annoying internet cliché to begin with, most of my friends are queer and feminist, and I've yet to meet and/or encounter someone who has such extreme views against men. I mean real people, not a fake persona that you use on social media. It's like the annoying stereotype of Nina calling you gay when you show even an ounce of care or affection, as if 1) being gay is an insult (like really, using gay as something pejorative in the big 25?), and 2) being emotional or respectful is any less 'manly'.
I just wish that the MC could somehow stand up against the stereotype that Jordan has painted over him. Not by being rude, or insulting, or saying mean things; just being totally honest and somewhat 'assertive', and telling her straight to her face that, if she wants at least a friendship on equal footing, she needs to stop having a preconceived idea of how straight men are, and respect you just like you're respecting her, despite her judgment, especially if you're showing her from the beginning that you're far from what she believes every hetero male is.
I also agree with the sentiment that, if the whole thing with Chloe and Jordan comes as a package deal (which I'm not against), it should start to be handled differently to be an interesting path, and not feel like a 'walking-dildo/third-wheel' one. Not only does Jordan have to start treating you like a normal person, both of them also have to understand that the best way to get to know someone isn't inviting them just so that you can flirt in front of their faces all the time. I know you're a couple, it's totally cool, and I get shows of affection, but does everything have to revolve around how the two of you have the hots for each other? Or, how you're constantly thinking about eating each other out? Instead of, I don't know, having a normal chat to get to know each other? Or maybe I just have an ancient outlook on friendship, I don't know, but that's definitely not my go-to topic of conversation nor the way meetings with people who are together usually go for me.
Some devs need to understand that a lesbian relationship is, at the end of the day, another relationship, in the sense that there are things you usually display in public, and other stuff that you save for yourselves in the intimacy, in order to not make those around you uncomfortable, and to respect the time that they're spending with you. But for some reason, the mindset is always like "well, they're lesbians, so you're cool with absolutely everything, right?"