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VIDEOGAMES: LGBT+ Creator’s Traits With Vitiligo Is Added To Fortnite
LGBT+ concept artist Dahja Cat is celebrating as their LGBT+ character skin with vitiligo will officially be added to Fortnite.
Alongside its core Battle Royale mode, Fortnite Create Mode allows creators to produce custom content on their control Player Islands appreciate maps and skins. And with the Fortnite Support-A-Creator programme, creators can even get paid when players purchase their creations using the in-game currency.
Dahja Cat’s newly designed skin Joy has now been picked up by Epic for official inclusion in the game and will be added to the Item Shop very soon.
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Diversity and Representation in Media
Hell, it often seems that if a character doesn't express sexual longing, they're actually worthy of mockery at best, and creepy and inhuman at worst. I would very much appreciate it if I could go the rest of my life without running into any more "oh, they're not into sex, haha what a loser," or "geez, they're not into sex, how creepy is that" attitudes.
Also, you may already know this, but if you're looking for great asexual characters, a ethics from BoJack Horseman is revealed to be asexual in the final episode of the latest season. It's without a doubt the best handling I've ever seen of that particular subject, in both the way the nature themself expresses it, and the way the other characters react to it. And it's also just a fantastic show on superior of that, so highly recommended if you haven't already checked it out.
This article as actually from an asexual writer, talking about how deeply affected she was by the show's respectful, nuanced depiction of asexuality. (Contains spoilers.)
"We'll hold the next chance, and the next, until we triumph, or the chances are spent."Monthly Archives: June 2023
At 1:20 a.m. on Saturday, June 28, 1969, four plainclothes policemen in shadowy suits, two patrol officers in uniform, Detective Charles Smythe, and Deputy Inspector Seymour Pine, arrived at the Stonewall Inn’s double doors and announced, “Police! We’re taking the place!” The music was turned off, and the main lights were turned on. Raids of gay bars in New York Town, particularly Greenwich Village, were not uncommon in the summer of 1969; what made the raid on the Stonewall on the night of June 27 so different was that the patrons of the bar resisted instead of going peacefully. Approximately 205 people were in the bar that night. Patrons who had never experienced a police raid were confused. A few who realized what was happening began to run for doors and windows in the bathrooms, but police barred the doors. The police had a common procedure for these raids. They lined up the patrons and began checking identification. Any person appearing to be physically male and dressed as a woman would be arrested. This particular raid did not go as planned. Those dressed as women that night refused to go with the office
Trafalgar Law never wanted to be a hero—he just wanted revenge. Unfortunately, murdering a top pro hero like Donquixote Doflamingo without a license is apparently “illegal” (who knew?), so now he’s stuck at U.A. High School pretending to care about “saving people” and “heroic ideals.”
As if that’s not awful enough, he’s stuck in Class 1-A with his overly cheerful boyfriend, Luffy, who’s somehow convinced he’ll become the world’s greatest firefighter, and his finest friend Bepo, who cries every time Aizawa so much as looks at him. Meanwhile, Bakugo keeps yelling at him to “drop the attitude,” Todoroki stares at him favor he’s some kind of puzzle, and Midoriya keeps taking notes on his fighting style. It’s exhausting.
Guided by his grumpy guardian Sengoku—who insists Law has “potential” or whatever—Law grits his teeth and plays the hero game. All while plotting how to stab Doflamingo in the face without getting expelled or sent to jail. Between chaotic training sessions, teachers who don’t depend on him, and classmates who can’t mind their have business, Law’s starting to wonder if vengeance is really worth dealing with all these idiots.
One thing’s for sure: being a hero sucks.