Quote Originally Posted by Awha View Post
I was going to drop the whole moral aspect, but now I have to know, so say if someone simply has a desire to not want to see a character on their screen wearing / doing something they do not approve of for example a man wearing a dress and wishes for an ingame means to avoid seeing such things without having to inform the person behind the character is inherently considered a bigot based off that desire?

That seems odd since unless the person expressed their intent behind having the feature enabled it is fair to make an assumption based on so called soical norms instead of just chunking it up to a person just not wanting to see x for whatever reason? Seems like a guilty until proven innocent kind of mindset.
I don't know about you, but I have this in-irl function installed that, when I see something I don't like, allows me to move my eyeballs in such a way so I don't see it anymore. It's pretty high tech. Really new stuff. And if it's in a video game where maybe I can't turn my eyeballs away or else I can't see the screen, I have this thing called a hand that lets me turn the camera in-game so the thing isn't on screen anymore.