Subject: I'd like that to be the case, but...
Author:
Posted on: 2019-07-04 03:49:00 UTC

From what I've seen, I don't trust CDPR to approach those questions with the tact necessary to do anything interesting or meaningful - they've treated trans people like a joke on twitter, spread gender non-conforming bodies on in-game advertisements meant to be shocking, and not even begun to discuss nuance in interviews.

And without nuance and understanding, just asking those questions can get into some nasty territory. It's a pattern that minorities see, over and over again - some privileged person just wants to have a nice reasonable discussion about whether or not we're human. Or clean. Or if it's wrong to hurt us. And what they're seeing as a nice civil discussion is, for us, a fight for survival - we can't just walk away because the people who are arguing against us will take it as admission of defeat, we have to play, once again, as people demand that we prove that we have the right to exist to whatever standard they want.

To angry-type for a moment: The humanity of my augmented body should not be up for debate. (And my body is literally augmented! I have rebuilt it with technology in order to live a better existence, that is the definition of augmentation!) I am not unclean, my existence is not profane nor "out of touch with my inner nature", and trying to raise those questions, to ask people to decide if maybe I shouldn't be considered "clean", is an act of violence.

I would play, and love, your ideal game. There's really interesting questions that can be asked here, and queer cyberpunk gets into amazing territory. But... CDPR, at this point, has a track record of cataclysmically un-ideal takes on queer and especially trans experiences. I don't trust them to have any of the nuance and understanding necessary to actually present these questions in a way that will be meaningful to people - I fully expect the game will be a massive, shiny, expensive megaphone that blasts doubts and uncertainties that anyone who doesn't fit its mold of "normal" might not be deserving of respect, or rights, or... existence. And that'll be in metaphors and symbolism, sure, but... it's not terribly far to go from "we're questioning the humanity of people who rebuild their bodies with (fictional) technology" to "we're questioning the humanity of people who rebuild their bodies (slightly more subtly) with (real) technology."

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