Subject: Disclaimer:
Author:
Posted on: 2015-03-23 12:29:00 UTC

I haven't read many of Skarm's missions, and haven't particularly flagged up 'the tickling scenes' when I have.

You say what about gay people who have to trawl through yet another straight romance[?], and you're right, of course. The same goes for every other way in which any given reader or writer differs from the 'cultural norm'. (And as a side note, given your strong opinions in this general area, I'd be really interested to see you contribute to this discussion up-Board.) If you're interested in something that the majority of people aren't - whether it's a fetish, a fandom, or a genre - you're going to have a hard time finding it to read, and are likely to face some... let's say skepticism when you write it.

But on the flip side: most PPC missions aren't stuffed full of (agent) romance, straight or otherwise. There's a handful of cases where someone decided to make their agents' relationships an arc plot (I'm randomly thinking of Araeph's inclusion of the Isaiah/Quen [I think?] subplot in her DTE missions), but even so, most of their missions don't really cover it. So your hypothetical (er... not so hypothetical, around here XD) gay person will usually be able to read a mission without having to read straight romance, whoever that mission is by.

And yeah, sometimes people get ellipsis skeptical about single instances, too. I know at least one person was put off by the fact that Agent Kaitlyn is a lesbian, despite it going virtually unmentioned in the mission which revealed it. But I think there is a difference between 'this thing shows up occasionally, and it kinda bugs me', and 'this thing shows up in every single one of your missions', whatever the thing is. PPC missions aren't about the agents' sex lives, and seeing them pop up constantly can be jarring even if it's entirely in accordance with your own sexuality. ;)




All that being said, and just to make sure I tick off both of you: I'm not sure that YKINMK does cut both ways the way PoorCynic is suggesting. That phrase has always, to me, meant '... but I'll respect it anyway', not '... so don't make a big deal about it'. It's a concept designed to allow people to express feelings (and more broadly, non-harmful opinions) that other people might find unusual - not a way to ask them to stop doing so.

Too many words; gonna stop here.

hS

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