https://www.inverse.com/gaming/hogwa...r-reaction-bad

It hurts me to watch the games industry clap for Hogwarts Legacy. There have been countless outcries from trans people just asking for support. All you have to do is not support Rowling. But at the end of the day, so many people are desperate to justify to themselves why it is ok to consume a silly video game, or a book, or a play because it was important to their childhood. Hogwarts Legacy is just a game; you can miss it. There are a million other mediocre objective-filled games to play.

It is active ignorance of the realities facing transgender people. I went to school for journalism, surrounded by three hundred other people who were told to stay up to date with important issues facing the world. Every day I would wake up and see a news story about trans rights being taken away across the country, or how it was the deadliest year on record for trans people in America. Nobody I went to school with knew about these things until I told them, but they would turn around and tell me about how they had gone to see the Harry Potter play on Broadway or how excited they were to wear a Harry Potter Halloween costume. I would go home and have daily panic attacks.
https://noescapevg.com/if-it-seems-l...ause-they-are/
And to be clear, I’m one of those nonbinary people making this request. It’s why I’m writing this article. Ever since I came out as agender[3] a couple years ago, I have felt incredibly awkward about talking about my own experiences either internally or externally. I have remained in the closet of least resistance, never exploring what it means to be agender nor being as vocal at home, at work or in my area in general about issues that affect all queer and trans people as I should have been, all in the name of “staying safe.” I regret this deeply every day. And ultimately it doesn’t matter. The far right is still coming for blood, no matter how supposedly unobtrusive your “Otherness.” Solidarity cannot be a four-letter word here, and there is more at stake than mere comfort or the illusion of safety.

But hey, if you decide you do want to buy Hogwarts Legacy, or you’re one of the damn fools throwing $300 into a pit in the ground labeled “Collector’s Edition,” neither I nor nobody else can stop you. I want you to do this, though: be honest about it. Understand what it means. Understand that your former trans and nonbinary friends will understand your move as one where you value your personal entertainment more highly than supporting them. It’s not cancel culture, it’s not suppression of different ideas or failing to separate the art from the artist, it is a clear articulation of your values in the face of an explicit request for support. And folks simply have to plan and organize accordingly. It’s nothing personal. Thanks for your time.
Chiaramente il punto di vista è biased essendo entrambi gli articolisti non in accordo con il genere loro assegnato alla nascita.

Tuttavia mi chiedo: ha senso?

È un gioco sui maghetti quindi dedicato a un pubblico di minori (o di adulti minorati che ancora son fan di Harry Potter a 40 anni), non è che si sparerà ai trans che vagano per l'open world.
Voi che pensate di questa cosa?

È ancora possibile separare il prodotto dalle idee dell'autore?
Voglio dire, metà degli scrittori studiati a scuola probabilmente menavano la moglie quando si rifiutava di scopare per il mal di testa, dovremmo smettere di leggerne le opere o farci piacere i mondi letterari che hanno creato?