Subject: ...rant incoming. (cw: transphobia, misogyny, violence)
Author:
Posted on: 2019-06-29 16:59:00 UTC

To expand on the content warning: I'm going to quote some transphobic and misogynistic things people have said, and talk about how they're gateways to violence against people like me.

Hi, I'm a queer trans woman, and CD Projekt Red keeps saying things that worry me to the point that I'm solidly wary of both game and company.

The first thing I saw directly connected to CP2077 was this tweet, in which the official CP2077 account tweeted "Did you just assume their gender?!" in response to someone saying "I want more guys!" - which was pretty clearly intended to be read as "I want more content, guys!". "Did you just assume their gender?" is a transphobic meme, for reasons Dr Ashley Nova explains better than I can before coffee.

CDPR issued the usual non-apology ("Sorry to all those offended", "we didn't mean to", etc), and I want to say they fired the PR person who wrote the tweet (no sources on that one, I'm afraid), and that would have been that. Except...

Just about a year later (this month, in fact!), Adam Badowski, the game director on CP2077, had some hideous things to say about womens' bodies. While trying to defend a mission in which the player rescues a kidnapped woman, finding her naked, unconscious, and on ice, said director talked about how augmented bodies are profane, no longer sacred - and I directly quote, "She is not clean."

"She is not clean." Because she dared to change her body. Because she dared to use technology to live a better life.

"She is not clean" will quite possibly be on the lips of the person who beats me to death. For daring to change my body. For daring to use medicine (which is technology!) to live a better life.

The entire thought process there is utterly terrifying to me, because to say that only unchanged, unassisted bodies are sacred is to say that trans people, disabled people, neurodivergent people, anyone who dares use technology or medicine to make their bodies more comfortable and their lives better are profane - valueless, evil, and the deserving recipients of the violence we're already subject to.

The game reduces this woman to a literal object. She has no agency, she even has no awareness, she's completely exposed, and the player is invited to make a moral judgement on her - is she clean or unclean? Should she be rescued or not? Should the player inflict violence on her? The game's director has made it very clear that he intends this to be things the player has to think about, to debate the value of an augmented (read as: trans, or disabled, or...) person's existence.

And finally, the only trans person I've seen or heard of in the game thus far, is a hyper-sexualized in-game advertisement. Trans women are frequently hyper-sexualized in media - we're presented as these terrifying things who want to trick good innocent straight men into having sex with a person with a penis, to the point where our very existence is an active sexual threat. And that's very easy to read into the advertisement - it's presented without context, just a piece of set-dressing, "here, it's the transsexual menace!" thrown into peoples' faces once again.

As of the E3 demo earlier this month, you cannot play a physically gender non-conforming character in Cyberpunk 2077. You must pick, apparently-cis man or apparently-cis woman. There has been no discussion of the nuances of living any other option, either on its own or in relationship to capitalism, technology, surveillance, or augmentation - the key themes of cyberpunk. The game's commentary on transness is scarily un-nuanced, with a trans body being displayed for shock value and an augmented body (thinly-veiled metaphor for transness or other minorities that use technology to adapt) being displayed for the player to judge as clean or unclean.

Unclean. I still can't get over that.

If it was just one of these incidents? Sure. We could talk about it, we could disassemble it, I could have faith in CDPR. But this stuff keeps happening - every time we see a hint of the culture there, of how they think about queer people or disabled people or women, it's horrifying. And we get the usual non-apology, and then it happens again. And again.

So. All that to say: I predict Cyberpunk 2077 will be Yet Another White Male Power Fantasy. It might even be good at that. But the themes they're using that comment on people like me, and the messages the average uncritical player will take away from the game about people like me, scare me.

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