Except that she didn't.
I said that she doesn't say in the game that she's 100% lesbian. Then you reply that she
did say that, and to prove your point, you insert a bunch of screen shots in which she
doesn't say it. There is not one place in any of the images you used where she says that she's 100% lesbian.
So it doesn't seem as though she has any interest in men at all, and I think that's fine. It's good to have a lesbian character that's not even remotely into the idea of experimenting with guys because that's somewhat more accurate to real life.
I also think it's fine if she doesn't ever have any interest in men, just like I think it's fine if she decides to experiment, whether she decides after the fact that she likes it or doesn't like it. I don't think it's either good or bad to have a lesbian character who has no interest in men. It's merely a storytelling decision. I leave it up to the storyteller to tell the story he or she wishes. I give my feedback, just like anyone else, and if the story goes too far off the mark from my interests, I find a different story.
Finding a "100% lesbian" who's willing to suck a cock, let alone touch one, is actually rare in real life (porn stars being a minority exception).
This is a statement which is not only impossible to prove, but, without conducting some very extensive research, can only be supported by anecdotal evidence. I can talk about lesbians (other than porn stars) I've known who were open to occasional encounters with men, and you can talk about all of the many lesbians you know who have confirmed to you that they would never touch a cock, but we're just comparing notes from our own extremely limited samplings.
We have a word for that : bi(sexual). She may be in a relationship with another girl, but that's exactly what a bi is
Believe it or not, I'm actually aware of the word "bisexual" and what it means. If you like, I suppose we can debate to what extent a person has to be attracted to or sexually active with both genders in order to be classified as bisexual.
Are we going to say that anyone who has had sexual contact with people of both genders is bisexual? In that case, I suspect that there are very few lesbians in the world, as a majority of the lesbians I've known and a majority of celebrities who claim to be lesbians had sexual contact with men in the past, before declaring themselves to be lesbians. Does this mean that they are not in fact lesbians, but must be bisexual? Or are we going to argue that, because it was in the past only, they can now call themselves lesbians? What happens if a woman who had sex with men in the past, but then came out as a lesbian, decides to have one more sexual encounter with a man at some point in the future. Was she bisexual all along? Was she straight at first, then became a lesbian, then became bisexual?
If a woman isn't attracted to men, either sexually or romantically, but she's willing to have sex with a man in a threesome situation, in order to get with a girl she wants, does she lose her lesbian label? If a man who was straight his whole life decides to experiment with another man once, decides he doesn't like it, and only has straight sex for the rest of his life, is he bisexual on the basis of that one encounter?
I would actually agree that all of these terms (bisexual, gay, lesbian, straight, etc.) have separate and distinct meanings, and that being a lesbian and being bisexual are two different things. And, in the interest of having a working language and being able to hold conversations, there must be some degree of agreement on definitions. The point I'm making is that I'm not prepared to accept that human sexuality is as simple as "Have you slept with both genders? Then you're bisexual." I think that there are degrees of variation, and that it's not always easy to figure it out.