I don't get it.
This is a fantasy setting. It's clearly a fantasy race. Let's assume the race consists of people who can reproduce with anybody of their own race by throwing gang signs at each other, Naruto style, and then suddenly, a dragon air drops a child. In my head, they would instead use the names in the conversations or invent a new pronoun because they were probably isolated for a while before learning the common language. They/them pronouns make 0 sense in my head for this setup.
All of this makes less sense if they actually do have two sexes.
Yeah, I don't know. I enjoyed some of the mechanics in Inquisition, but Veilguard is turning the knob towards goofy and cartoonish a bit too much. It lost its dark fantasy element from what was shown in the trailers.
This is a fantasy setting. It's clearly a fantasy race. Let's assume the race consists of people who can reproduce with anybody of their own race by throwing gang signs at each other, Naruto style, and then suddenly, a dragon air drops a child. In my head, they would instead use the names in the conversations or invent a new pronoun because they were probably isolated for a while before learning the common language. They/them pronouns make 0 sense in my head for this setup.
All of this makes less sense if they actually do have two sexes.
Yeah, that is true. And it made sense. I still remember the gay characters in Inquisition that you couldn't romance unless you had the same sex. It set a clear romancing boundary due to their preferences, which was novel and well-placed.Bioware has a fairly good track record with LGBT+ so this doesn't surprise me.
Anecdotally, Dragon Age was quite popular with my LGBT friends.
Yeah, I don't know. I enjoyed some of the mechanics in Inquisition, but Veilguard is turning the knob towards goofy and cartoonish a bit too much. It lost its dark fantasy element from what was shown in the trailers.