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18 years later, and Persona 2 remains the most progressive JRPG about homosexuality.

mother 3 is probably the most progressive. One character's arc is about them not being able to express themselves as transgender and acting out/doing evil shit because of it.

which character? i don't remember this.


Also, yeah. FF13 had Fang and Vanille (they also get the most romantic ending in the game, don't mind 13-2 or LR), and it was better than this tbh.

Either way i seriously don't trust japanese devs/game writers giving respect and thought to LGBTQ+ characters any time soon. I'd love to see it, but they can't handle them, they really can't write those characters.
 

Kinsei

Banned
which character? i don't remember this.


Also, yeah. FF13 had Fang and Vanille (they also get the most romantic ending in the game, don't mind 13-2 or LR), and it was better than this tbh.

Either way i seriously don't trust japanese devs/game writers giving respect and thought to LGBTQ+ characters any time soon. I'd love to see it, but they can't handle them, they really can't write those characters.

I think they're referring to Fassad.
 

Inuhanyou

Believes Dragon Quest is a franchise managed by Sony
which character? i don't remember this.


Also, yeah. FF13 had Fang and Vanille (they also get the most romantic ending in the game, don't mind 13-2 or LR), and it was better than this tbh.

Either way i seriously don't trust japanese devs/game writers giving respect and thought to LGBTQ+ characters any time soon. I'd love to see it, but they can't handle them, they really can't write those characters.

Japanese writers have it in them, but prolific game writers that are prominent? Not really.

Only YT even cares to write homosexuals in his games, and only as a natural byproduct of them existing on earth and thus needing to be represented, or so his explanation was.
 

Ketkat

Member
There's no explicit romance with either of them, just subtext. In Aigis's case it's more that her SL just wasn't changed much.

You have it backwards. Aigis SL was different for FeMC. Her rank 10 is her wishing she was an ideal partner for you. Elizabeth's is just unchanged completely from what I remember
 

TheChaos

Member
And what's frustrating about games like XIII and even Tales of Zestiria is that they skirt the line way too much without ever fully comitting. I do think Vanille and Fang were totally lovers especially by the end of LR, and Sorey and Mikleo was heavily implied too, but why just fuck around? Tell us they're a couple.

That's not exclusive to same-sex couples. It's a staple of anime where it's left ambiguous. Think of all of the straight harem anime shows where the main character never actually picks a girl.

That's the plan.

I addressed this in an interview a while back, if you're interested in our take on it.

http://www.thegaygamer.com/2015/11/...visible-on-indiegogo-mac-pc-ps4-xbox-one.html

Neat, thanks for the link. And it may just me having, um, personal preferences but I hope one of them is Kogi. [/sorrynotsorry]
 
This is actually something that has been bothering me with a lot of the Persona talk recently. If I was more eloquent, maybe I could make a thread about it, but I don't think I could properly frame it in a way that doesn't make people defensive.

As a queer man myself, Kanji's character in Persona resonated deeply with me. My adolescence was filled with a lot of unglamorous amounts of doubt and a lack of clear answers and confidence in something as primal as whom I felt attracted to. Specifically because of the ambiguity and warts of Kanji's problems, it felt like an extremely genuine representation of how I felt at that time, going through those same struggles.

A handful of my introverted gay friends who played the game were all similarly struck blind with how many feelings of stark recognition he brought up. Granted of course, this is a pretty small sample size.

Flash forward to eight years later, and there's no shortage of people throwing Hashino's team under the bus for LGBT representation, sometimes for what I can recognize as some pretty valid reasons.

The experience of figuring out where you fall on the kinsey spectrum isn't universal, and I can imagine my friends and I may very well be in the minority regarding how positively we view Kanji's characterization.

But I do get disheartened when I see a lot of (presumably) straight people citing him as poor, or inauthentic representation. Perhaps their heart is in the right place, but what passes a binary of 'is this good/bad semi-objective representation' is an incredibly bold claim to make when you're already part of the represented group, and feels fairly disingenuous if you're an outsider or ally.

So what is the point of this thread? To say that P2 is a cool fun game and P5 could stand to do a lot better? I'd actually agree, but I think using the authenticity of LGBT representation isn't a great way to make that point.

Unfortunately, Kanji isn't really positive representation. The moral of the story is "just because you like things that break gender norms doesn't mean you're gay." It's been a while since I've played (the JP ver of) the game, but I was left the impression that the game paired Kanji conquering his demons with "whew, thank god he's not gay."

I don't see why it matters whether or not the OP is gay or why talking about the nature ("authenticity") representation in the industry isn't worth talking about.

(I'm gay).
 
I'm so pissed Persona seems to have once again dropped the ball with regards to LGBT representation. Kanji's arc started off promising and ended up being a half-hearted copout, with a liberal sprinkling of Yosuke homophobia. I hoped they would have at least included a gay confidant/romance option among the glut of waifus in P5, but nope. Then there was all that weirdness with Sojiro being all "I don't usually allow dudes in my passenger seat, oh, and I don't put guys' numbers in my phone either" within minutes of meeting the protagonist. Not to mention Ryuji's obnoxious "HEY YOU'D BETTER NOT LOOK AT MY ASS" comments when crawling through the air vent. Atlus pls.


There was also Caina, the Cocytus member in love with his leader Vinsfeld. He was male in the Japanese version, but was changed to female for the Western release, because reasons.
 

Flink

Member
It's true though, the title of this thread is a huge sprawling statement and really only queer folks themselves should be able to say what best represents them. Same goes for any marginalized group.


I get what you're saying, but I have no issues with the thread. Any positive talk about gay people lately is nice to see.

Gay guy here.
 
D

Deleted member 465307

Unconfirmed Member

Ravidrath

Member
That response about about the team's commitment to a diversity of perspectives is great.

I'm sure a lot of people will assume we planned it from the start, but it just... kinda happened?

We were making the characters in real-time during the campaign, and people were just making characters that seemed interesting to them.

I guess we have a reasonably diverse staff, so maybe it's not a surprise this is the cast we got. But still happy with the outcome.
 

Inuhanyou

Believes Dragon Quest is a franchise managed by Sony
Unfortunately, Kanji isn't really positive representation. The moral of the story is "just because you like things that break gender norms doesn't mean you're gay." It's been a while since I've played (the JP ver of) the game, but I was left the impression that the game paired Kanji conquering his demons with "whew, thank god he's not gay."

I don't see why it matters whether or not the OP is gay or why talking about the nature ("authenticity") representation in the industry isn't worth talking about.

(I'm gay).

I never really thought of it like that...i figured Kanji's whole thing was that men should be able to break societal norms of preset gender stereotypes and not be judged as inferior or strange based on wanting to act out and be themselves, but i can see how one would come to your conclusion as well now that i think about it.

With Naoto as well, the fact that she was a female in a male dominated field and had to harden herself and be gender neutral to be taken seriously was another one, and i didn't even really think of the viewpoint from a trans person's point of view about how it may look like gender waffling.
 

djtiesto

is beloved, despite what anyone might say
1741699-2132401742_view_noscale.jpg


Emil, from Nier.

Where is it mentioned that Emil is gay, or is it implied? I didn't really remember that from my playthrough.
 

aadiboy

Member
Unfortunately, Kanji isn't really positive representation. The moral of the story is "just because you like things that break gender norms doesn't mean you're gay."[/SPOILER]
I mean, isn't that a positive message as well, to not let gender norms dictate how you live your life? If anything, the message is more powerful because Kanji is straight, because it shows other straight guys that liking feminine things is ok.
 
I never really thought of it like that...i figured Kanji's whole thing was that men should be able to break societal norms of preset gender stereotypes and not be judged as inferior or strange based on wanting to act out and be themselves, but i can see how one would come to your conclusion as well now that i think about it.

With Naoto as well, the fact that she was a female in a male dominated field and had to harden herself and be gender neutral to be taken seriously was another one, and i didn't even really think of the viewpoint from a trans person's point of view about how it may look like gender waffling.

Right as someone who was struggling to come out at the time of persona 4s release I initially thought of Kanji as a good representation for someone who is questioning their sexualittle. But instead of the game telling you it's ok to question your sexuality or not be binary it takes the route of completely ignoring that and basically saying it's ok to lIke female associated things as long as you are straight. But it wasn't until after a few years of growing up that I realized that Kanji wasn't supposed to be inclusive at all especially since Yosuke is such a piece of shit to him

mean, isn't that a positive message as well, to not let gender norms dictate how you live your life? If anything, the message is more powerful because Kanji is straight, because it shows other straight guys that liking feminine things is ok

Its a positive message overall but it was not handled particularly well as they went out of their way to make sure you knew that Kanji was straight and definitely not one of those weirdo gay people. And this plays into the problem Persona faces in that there are a lot good of messages that are constantly belittled by their own characters at points
 

Clov

Member
I didn't mind Kanji at all in P4, and honestly, I didn't think he was the big problem with the game; it's Yosuke. Seriously. He's the one who's constantly making homophobic comments around Kanji, the source of all the "Oh no! Kanji might like guys, and that's creepy!" jokes that the game spews out. I loved P4, but those seriously dragged down the game for me. I can't emphasize enough what a garbage character Yosuke is.
 

Slater

Banned
Where is it mentioned that Emil is gay, or is it implied? I didn't really remember that from my playthrough.

When they go to Facade for the wedding, it's heavily implied in Replicant and toned down in Gestalt cause of the much bigger age gap.

Taro made it supremely clear in the Grimoire though, and shut down any other interpretation, he's just gay
 

Ravidrath

Member
Unfortunately, Kanji isn't really positive representation. The moral of the story is "just because you like things that break gender norms doesn't mean you're gay." It's been a while since I've played (the JP ver of) the game, but I was left the impression that the game paired Kanji conquering his demons with "whew, thank god he's not gay."

Hmm.

While I certainly get what you're talking about, I still felt Kanji was gay and just struggling and confused.

He is in HS, after all, and I would imagine that coming out in HS isn't a thing in Japan like it is here now. And it certainly wasn't a thing when I was in HS, so I can relate to it.

Naoto certainly added to that confusion, and yeah, kind of gave him an out.

But given that shadows are canonically their true selves and his was pretty unequivocally gay, I think that's actually probably the most accurate interpretation and everything else is about teenaged confusion and identity.

So, if anything, I feel like his "feminine" hobbies might be the worst part of his representation. Because Japan can't seem to imagine a normal guy who likes traditionally "masculine" things could also be gay.

This is also informed by my own experiences in Japan, too.

Just in every instance where I felt safe coming out to someone Japanese they've always been shocked, because I don't fit the stereotype their media has been feeding them their entire life.
 
I mean, isn't that a positive message as well, to not let gender norms dictate how you live your life? If anything, the message is more powerful because Kanji is straight, because it shows other straight guys that liking feminine things is ok.

It's a positive message, but not in terms of being gay. Maybe it seems like a powerful message to you, but Japan is a society where gay men start families with women and fool around on the side.
 

cj_iwakura

Member
Personally, I always thought of Kanji as straight but effeminate. He has feminine interests which makes him feel conflicted, but he's clearly into Naoto later on.
 

F0rneus

Tears in the rain
Hmm.

While I certainly get what you're talking about, I still felt Kanji was gay and just struggling and confused.

He is in HS, after all, and I would imagine that coming out in HS isn't a thing in Japan like it is here now. And it certainly wasn't a thing when I was in HS, so I can relate to it.

Naoto certainly added to that confusion, and yeah, kind of gave him an out.

I don't think that Kanji can be seen as gay, when he was still pinning for Naoto even when he knew she was female. He's very bi, but not gay. He's a tough guy who likes girly things and is certainly attracted to men. But he's also attracted to tomboy girls.
 

Inuhanyou

Believes Dragon Quest is a franchise managed by Sony
It's a positive message, but not in terms of being gay. Maybe it seems like a powerful message to you, but Japan is a society where gay men start families with women and fool around on the side.

To be fair to Japan, its no different from christian fundamentalist America in that sense, but it does show how repressive society can be to sexual desires in general.
 

Ravidrath

Member
I don't think that Kanji can be seen as gay, when he was still pinning for Naoto even when he knew she was female. He's very bi, but not gay. He's a tough guy who likes girly things and is certainly attracted to men. But he's also attracted to tomboy girls.

I had a GF in college and have been attracted to the occasional women since, but I still identify as gay. And I would say that all were tomboys.

Just because there might be a woman out there for me doesn't mean that I'm bi. I think it means there are exceptions. And when I came out, I stopped looking for them.

Kinsey scale goes from 0 to 6, after all, meaning there are plenty of gradations and exceptions in there. So I'd probably put myself in the 4 to 5 range.
 

Linkura

Member
IS gets a bum rap too because it's so unforgivingly hard to begin with. But once you get about halfway it's much much easier to the point where you can break the systems.

Um.... what? IS is ridiculously easy except for the final boss (which they nerfed in the PSP version). EP does ramp it up, but it does get easier later on.
 

Inuhanyou

Believes Dragon Quest is a franchise managed by Sony
I had a GF in college and have been attracted to the occasional women since, but I still identify as gay. And I would say that all were tomboys.

Just because there might be a woman out there for me doesn't mean that I'm bi. I think it means there are exceptions.

Never encountered this before in my entire life and i can't wrap my head around it since you said it.

I always thought one is either attracted to one gender, or both.

I've never ever heard of "some days i like date women and am attracted to women but i'm still gay" Categorically it confuses me, no offense i mean.

But i guess human sexuality in general is not so easily defined.
 
Hmm.

While I certainly get what you're talking about, I still felt Kanji was gay and just struggling and confused.

He is in HS, after all, and I would imagine that coming out in HS isn't a thing in Japan like it is here now. And it certainly wasn't a thing when I was in HS, so I can relate to it.

Naoto certainly added to that confusion, and yeah, kind of gave him an out.

But given that shadows are canonically their true selves and his was pretty unequivocally gay, I think that's actually probably the most accurate interpretation and everything else is about teenaged confusion and identity.

So, if anything, I feel like his "feminine" hobbies might be the worst part of his representation. Because Japan can't seem to imagine a normal guy who likes traditionally "masculine" things could also be gay.

This is also informed by my own experiences in Japan, too.

Just in every instance where I felt safe coming out to someone Japanese they've always been shocked, because I don't fit the stereotype their media has been feeding them their entire life.

He's not believed to be gay.

巽完二というキャラを語るにあたり、絶対ついてまわる疑問。「こいつ、ガチホモじゃね?」
特にアニメ版視聴者の方は未だ疑っている方も多いだろう。ゲーム版既プレイ者の間でも、一部意見が別れるほどである。(事実、後述のダンジョンをクリアし彼を救出した後も、それらしい様子を匂わせる(疑われる)シーンがある)

しかし、あえてここで宣言しておきたい。違う、完二は同性愛の気があるわけではない。

そもそも、マヨナカテレビに登場するシャドウは本人の隠したい一面を極度に誇張した形で登場する。
また、雪子や完二等、「番組」持ちのシャドウは特に面白おかしくなるようにねじ曲げられて誇張されてしまうのだ。

つまり、よしんば彼が同性愛の気があったとしても、本来であればそれはごくごく小さなものでしかない。

完二は自分の裁縫などの趣味を女子に笑われたという過去があり、そのせいで「女が苦手」という感情をもっている。さらに、誘拐前日に出会った少年(白鐘直斗)に対し、妙にドキリとしてしまったことから、自分が同性愛の気があるのではと疑ってしまった。それが誇張された結果があのシャドウというわけである。
(ところで直斗にドキリとしたかというと…… それはゲームをプレーするか、アニメを視聴されたし。)

http://dic.nicovideo.jp/a/%E5%B7%BD%E5%AE%8C%E4%BA%8C
 

Ravidrath

Member
But i guess human sexuality in general is not so easily defined.

The Kinsey Scale, while useful, seems like it's seen as increasingly inadequate to define human sexuality.

Sexuality is a complex and three dimensional thing.

And no offense taken!

Kanji's experiences actually line up pretty well with my own, so of course I'm going to bring that into my interpretation.

A lot of of this is generational, too. I'm pushing 40 now and you didn't come out in HS then, and Japan is at least 20 years behind on that front.

So I can't dismiss him out of hand like a lot of people seem to want to.
 

F0rneus

Tears in the rain
I had a GF in college and have been attracted to the occasional women since, but I still identify as gay. And I would say that all were tomboys.

Just because there might be a woman out there for me doesn't mean that I'm bi. I think it means there are exceptions. And when I came out, I stopped looking for them.

Kinsey scale goes from 0 to 6, after all, meaning there are plenty of gradations and exceptions in there. So I'd probably put myself in the 4 to 5 range.

I can't pretend I understand the situation of a gay man in college. But to me Kanji's situation seemed a lot more muddled than what you present here. I mean he's in mad love with Naoto, when he thinks Naoto is male. And when he learns she's female he's still madly in love. It goes beyond a mere possible fling or just one crush amongst a sea of crushes. Boy is obsessed. I think it goes further than mere attractiveness.

As far as I can tell, Kanji is a 3 on the Kinsey scale. The ultimate bisexual. But then again I know nothing about that. So I can't really argue with you. I do hope he's a positive representation none the less. I goddamn love Kanji. Always part of my final party.
 

Clov

Member
Never encountered this before in my entire life and i can't wrap my head around it since you said it.

I always thought one is either attracted to one gender, or both.

I've never ever heard of "some days i like date women and am attracted to women but i'm still gay" Categorically it confuses me, no offense i mean.

But i guess human sexuality in general is not so easily defined.

Sexuality is a spectrum. It's incredibly varied, and can't really be accurately defined in a strict binary system. Especially since that sort of system ignores nonbinary/gender nonconforming people entirely.
 

cj_iwakura

Member
Um.... what? IS is ridiculously easy except for the final boss (which they nerfed in the PSP version). EP does ramp it up, but it does get easier later on.

We're gonna have to disagree here. I love EP, but it's tough all the way through. It gets even harder later on.

IS is very easy, though. Just tedious.
 
I can't pretend I understand the situation of a gay man in college. But to me Kanji's situation seemed a lot more muddled than what you present here. I mean he's in mad love with Naoto, when he thinks Naoto is male. And when he learns she's female he's still madly in love. It goes beyond a mere possible fling or just one crush amongst a sea of crushes. Boy is obsessed. I think it goes further than mere attractiveness.

As far as I can tell, Kanji is a 3 on the Kinsey scale. The ultimate bisexual. But then again I know nothing about that. So I can't really argue with you. I do hope he's a positive representation none the less. I goddamn love Kanji. Always part of my final party.

Persona 4 is operating under cartoon logic. You aren't meant to think that Kanji is bordering on gay because he was attracted to Naoto when he thought she was a boy. If Naoto is a girl, then Kanji is straight.
 

F0rneus

Tears in the rain
Persona 4 is operating under cartoon logic. You aren't meant to think that Kanji is bordering on gay because he was attracted to Naoto when he thought she was a boy. If Naoto is a girl, then Kanji is straight.

I've seen that boy's Palace (were they Palaces in P4? Can't remember). He sure isn't 100% straight.
 

Ravidrath

Member
I can't pretend I understand the situation of a gay man in college. But to me Kanji's situation seemed a lot more muddled than what you present here. I mean he's in mad love with Naoto, when he thinks Naoto is male. And when he learns she's female he's still madly in love. It goes beyond a mere possible fling or just one crush amongst a sea of crushes. Boy is obsessed. I think it goes further than mere attractiveness.

As far as I can tell, Kanji is a 3 on the Kinsey scale. The ultimate bisexual. But then again I know nothing about that. So I can't really argue with you. I do hope he's a positive representation none the less. I goddamn love Kanji. Always part of my final party.

I loved my college girlfriend, and very much wanted to sleep with her, and was actively dreaming about it.

Unfortunately, she was "saving herself," so I didn't get to. I'm a Gold Star Gay, just not by choice. :p

And I don't think "the ultimate bisexual" would have a gay bathhouse fantasy world with a shadow flanked by musclebound statues that hit you with male symbols. But maybe I'm expecting a more nuanced representation than Japan can deliver.
 
I've seen that boy's Palace (were they Palaces in P4? Can't remember). He sure isn't 100% straight.

Weren't the dungeons in P4 how they were perceived by other people? That's why they were over the top as it was a TV show for the viewers of the Midnight Channel.

Whereas P5's Palaces are the characters' vision of others.
 

Clov

Member
Weren't the dungeons in P4 how they were perceived by other people? That's why they were over the top as it was a TV show for the viewers of the Midnight Channel.

Whereas P5's Palaces are the characters' vision of others.

I thought the TV World dungeons, as well as the shadow characters, were parts of themselves that they were ashamed of.
 

cj_iwakura

Member
Also, I didn't really mean to make the OP so absolute in wording, but I really can't think of one that handles it more tastefully. (And 'one of the most' wouldn't fit. :p)
 

ryseing

Member
I remember Raven and Lucius and their supports in Fire Emblem 7.

Ike/Soren as well, and Heather. Really feels like IS would like to do more but are hamstrung because Nintendo.

I would like to see Raven/Lucius be made clearer in the inevitable FE7 remake.
 
The Shadow Hearts series is kind of weird about it.

There are several gay characters but they were prone to being the butt of "Ewww dat's gay" jokes. The acupuncturist in 1 was bad because they played him up as being rather predatory for cheap laughs, even having him creep on the underage Halley, but some of the other gay characters like Joachim and The Magimel Brothers are shown as nothing but good people. The shopkeep Magimel Brother even has a boyfriend in 3 and their relationship is like one of the very few in the series that's healthy and doesn't end in tragedy.
 

TriAceJP

Member
Well yes, that's what the whole thread is about. Persona 2, and how the series could look back a bit.

They could look back at a lot, saying how the two Persona 2 games were the best in the series ;)

I haven't booted up 5 yet though :eek:
 

cj_iwakura

Member
not even close, EP is leagues ahead of every other Persona game just about every other jrpg for that matter. how is jun the canon choice with how EP plays out?

Tatsuya is extremely protective of Jun in EP.
26-Persona2-11-52.jpg


More fuel to the fire.
Let the record show I'm on Team Maya, but I respect his devotion.
 
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