• Hey Guest. Check out your NeoGAF Wrapped 2025 results here!

Resident Evil Requiem Leon Kennedy became a “hot uncle” thanks to hawk-eyed female Capcom staff who reviewed “even the finest wrinkles on his neck,”

Should the toxic misandrists leave our boy Leon to retire in peace?

  • Yes. He's suffered enough, just as much from the hordes of Ganados as from his thirsty fanbase.

  • No. He can show me his suplexes in bed at any time.

  • No. He can show me his suplexes in bed at any time.... even if I'm male.


Results are only viewable after voting.

IbizaPocholo

NeoGAFs Kent Brockman
Leon Kennedy's "hot uncle" (ikeoji) redesign in *Resident Evil Requiem* was the result of meticulous internal review at Capcom—especially by female staff—balancing detailed visual aging with a carefully redefined veteran personality that respects his long series history.

Summary
- His new, aged-up appearance was unveiled at The Game Awards 2025 and quickly drew strong fan reactions.
- Japanese fans coined the nickname "ikeoji" (イケおじ), meaning an attractive middle-aged or older man, often translated by fans as "hot uncle."
- In an interview with AUTOMATON, director Koshi Nakanishi explained that Leon's new look required extensive refinement over a long period.
- Female development staff at Capcom played a particularly strict and influential role in reviewing Leon's visuals.
- According to Nakanishi, they scrutinized extremely fine details, including subtle wrinkles such as those on Leon's neck.
- Leon is a popular character internally at Capcom, which led to strong opinions and careful attention during the design process.
- Nakanishi noted that the visual refinement aimed to create a version of Leon that would emotionally resonate with players.
- Beyond visuals, the development team debated Leon's personality even more intensely.
- As a long-time veteran in the game's universe, Leon has experienced decades of horror, making overt fear or surprise feel out of character.
- Staff members frequently challenged character behavior, citing their own interpretations of Leon's roughly 30-year in-universe history.
- Discussions focused on how Leon should realistically react to situations given his experience compared to newer characters like Grace.
- After many internal debates, the team settled on a characterization they felt was consistent yet open to player interpretation.
- Nakanishi expressed hope that players would form their own understanding of Leon's personality when playing the game.
- The redesigned Leon has gained popularity across genders in Japan and has also spread widely through English-speaking online communities.
 
Last edited:
Christian Bale Swag GIF
 
Seems a translation for sugar daddy for the starving girls.
Honestly surprising this kind of attitube doesn't get too much attention.
 
Did they also have corresponding male staff looking over the female models in extreme detail to ensure they were as hot as possible?
They at least should, because some female models are frequently uglier in comparison to their human base counterpart, and i have no idea why (it's not star wars outlaws levels of 'what the f*ck are they doing'), but still...
 
Last edited:
Hypersexualization in video games is a problem because it pushes the idea that there is only one "ideal" body type and that men should be judged on how well they adhere to it.
Leon is a doll sexualized by someone you would think has never seen a man.
 
Did they also have corresponding male staff looking over the female models in extreme detail to ensure they were as hot as possible?
Have you seen what middle aged Ada looks like? She's identical except for a sexy streak of silver hair.
 
Did they also have corresponding male staff looking over the female models in extreme detail to ensure they were as hot as possible?

Probably not because the male staff know better than to allow women provide input on their female characters.
 
Japanese developer: The women working at the studio obsess over how perfectly hunky and with the air of a distinguished gentleman they can make/give the male character in the game.

Western developer: The women working at the studio obsess over how perfectly hunky and with the air of a distinguished gentleman they can make/give the female character in the game.
 
Source:


Look, we've all been there - blasting zombies in Raccoon City, dodging Lickers, and somehow still finding time to flirt with Ada Wong. But let's pause the zombie apocalypse for a sec and talk about the real horror in Resident Evil - the way Leon S. Kennedy gets reduced to a walking thirst trap. In a world where we're quick to call out the male gaze for turning women into eye candy, it's high time we flip the script and dissect the toxic female gaze. And poor Leon? He's Patient Zero for this epidemic of inherent misandry, where men are objectified not just for their brawn, but for their emotional vulnerability, all while being dismissed as disposable heroes.

Leon Kennedy first bursts onto the scene in Resident Evil 2 as a fresh-faced rookie cop with perfect hair, a sleek police uniform, and abs that could deflect a punch from Mr. X. He's the epitome of the "reluctant sweetheart" - competent, sassy, and just the right amount of brooding. But from the jump, the game's narrative - and let's be real, its fanbase - treats him like a Ken doll in a Barbie zombie world. Ada Wong literally uses him as a human shield, flirts to manipulate, and dips out faster than you can say "hasta la juego."

It's classic misandry: Leon's value is tied to his utility to women, his pain minimized, and his agency in the modern Resident Evil lore? That's for the ladies like Claire, Jill or Jessica to wield.

Fast-forward to the remakes and sequels, and the toxic female gaze ramps up to nightmare fuel. In Resident Evil 4 (and its shiny 2023 remake), Leon's not just fighting Las Plagas; he's battling the collective swoon of gamers who reduce him to "daddy" memes and fanfic fodder. Remember that scene where he's strapped to a chair, shirt half-open, getting injected with parasites? That's not horror; that's softcore objectification. The camera lingers on his chiseled jaw, his sweat-glistened forehead, turning vulnerability into voyeurism. And who benefits? Not Leon - he's the one grunting through the pain - but the audience, particularly those who've internalized a gaze that exoticizes male suffering.

It's inherent misandry at play: men like Leon are expected to endure endless trauma (zombies, bioweapons, endless betrayal) without complaint, all while looking hot doing it. Crying or complaining about it? Nah, that's "unmanly." Instead, his pain is aestheticized, fetishized and ultimately ignored. He's the lone wolf, the damaged good, the guy who's always saving the day but never gets his own happy ending. Ada ghosts him, Ashley Graham treats him like a knight in shining armor (read: disposable bodyguard), and even in crossovers like Dead by Daylight, he's just another pretty face to hook. Even his ageing can't save him from his cruel fate; in Requiem where he's well into his 50s, he's still a constant source of carnal desire. Even from his very own creators who have now branded him simply as yet another "イケおじ"; a hot uncle who's there for the ladies to thirst over.

This isn't admiration, it's a subtly-veiled hatred of male autonomy. By constantly portraying Leon as the eternal sufferer, the series reinforces that men are only "valuable" when they're broken and beautiful. Misandry disguised as desire.

And let's talk fandom for a hot minute. Scroll through Twitter or Reddit, and you'll see the gaze in full force: edits of Leon's slow-mo flips set to thirsty audio backgrounds, fan-art that amps up his "soft boy with cool haircut" vibes while ignoring his PTSD. Let's not even mention the bigoted Redfield bloodline memes, reducing his legacy in the franchise to simply another body that's there for primal breeding. It's not just harmless simping, it's a problematic cultural phenomenon that diminishes male characters to their appeal to women. Inherent misandry thrives here because it flips the power dynamic without accountability. Leon's agency is stripped away, his story arcs bent to serve romantic subplots, and his heroism is just a backdrop for someone else's empowerment. Compare him to female leads like Claire Redfield or Helena Harper. They're allowed complexity without the constant sexualization of their struggles. Leon? He's the juicy bait in a sea of undead.

Ignoring the toxic female gaze lets it fester, turning icons like Leon into symbols of unchecked misandry. Maybe in next remake (RE6?) give the guy a break: let him retire to a cabin, sip apple juice, and therapy his way out of the apocalypse just like other female characters like Sheva Alomar, Moira Burton and Sherry Birkin did. Until then, every time you reload that handgun and watch Leon's perfect hair bounce, remember - the real virus isn't the T-Virus. It's the gaze that infects all women.
 
Look, we've all been there - blasting zombies in Raccoon City, dodging Lickers, and somehow still finding time to flirt with Ada Wong. But let's pause the zombie apocalypse for a sec and talk about the real horror in Resident Evil - the way Leon S. Kennedy gets reduced to a walking thirst trap. In a world where we're quick to call out the male gaze for turning women into eye candy, it's high time we flip the script and dissect the toxic female gaze. And poor Leon? He's Patient Zero for this epidemic of inherent misandry, where men are objectified not just for their brawn, but for their emotional vulnerability, all while being dismissed as disposable heroes.

Leon Kennedy first bursts onto the scene in Resident Evil 2 as a fresh-faced rookie cop with perfect hair, a sleek police uniform, and abs that could deflect a punch from Mr. X. He's the epitome of the "reluctant sweetheart" - competent, sassy, and just the right amount of brooding. But from the jump, the game's narrative - and let's be real, its fanbase - treats him like a Ken doll in a Barbie zombie world. Ada Wong literally uses him as a human shield, flirts to manipulate, and dips out faster than you can say "hasta la juego."

It's classic misandry: Leon's value is tied to his utility to women, his pain minimized, and his agency in the modern Resident Evil lore? That's for the ladies like Claire, Jill or Jessica to wield.

Fast-forward to the remakes and sequels, and the toxic female gaze ramps up to nightmare fuel. In Resident Evil 4 (and its shiny 2023 remake), Leon's not just fighting Las Plagas; he's battling the collective swoon of gamers who reduce him to "daddy" memes and fanfic fodder. Remember that scene where he's strapped to a chair, shirt half-open, getting injected with parasites? That's not horror; that's softcore objectification. The camera lingers on his chiseled jaw, his sweat-glistened forehead, turning vulnerability into voyeurism. And who benefits? Not Leon - he's the one grunting through the pain - but the audience, particularly those who've internalized a gaze that exoticizes male suffering.

It's inherent misandry at play: men like Leon are expected to endure endless trauma (zombies, bioweapons, endless betrayal) without complaint, all while looking hot doing it. Crying or complaining about it? Nah, that's "unmanly." Instead, his pain is aestheticized, fetishized and ultimately ignored. He's the lone wolf, the damaged good, the guy who's always saving the day but never gets his own happy ending. Ada ghosts him, Ashley Graham treats him like a knight in shining armor (read: disposable bodyguard), and even in crossovers like Dead by Daylight, he's just another pretty face to hook. Even his ageing can't save him from his cruel fate; in Requiem where he's well into his 50s, he's still a constant source of carnal desire. Even from his very own creators who have now branded him simply as yet another "イケおじ"; a hot uncle who's there for the ladies to thirst over.

This isn't admiration, it's a subtly-veiled hatred of male autonomy. By constantly portraying Leon as the eternal sufferer, the series reinforces that men are only "valuable" when they're broken and beautiful. Misandry disguised as desire.

And let's talk fandom for a hot minute. Scroll through Twitter or Reddit, and you'll see the gaze in full force: edits of Leon's slow-mo flips set to thirsty audio backgrounds, fan-art that amps up his "soft boy with cool haircut" vibes while ignoring his PTSD. Let's not even mention the bigoted Redfield bloodline memes, reducing his legacy in the franchise to simply another body that's there for primal breeding. It's not just harmless simping, it's a problematic cultural phenomenon that diminishes male characters to their appeal to women. Inherent misandry thrives here because it flips the power dynamic without accountability. Leon's agency is stripped away, his story arcs bent to serve romantic subplots, and his heroism is just a backdrop for someone else's empowerment. Compare him to female leads like Claire Redfield or Helena Harper. They're allowed complexity without the constant sexualization of their struggles. Leon? He's the juicy bait in a sea of undead.

Ignoring the toxic female gaze lets it fester, turning icons like Leon into symbols of unchecked misandry. Maybe in next remake (RE6?) give the guy a break: let him retire to a cabin, sip apple juice, and therapy his way out of the apocalypse just like other female characters like Sheva Alomar, Moira Burton and Sherry Birkin did. Until then, every time you reload that handgun and watch Leon's perfect hair bounce, remember - the real virus isn't the T-Virus. It's the gaze that infects all women.
Well that's one way to interpret it.
 
Last edited:
I see what you are doing, but it kind of feels rather force and more dumb rather than funny and is probably making us look bad. A for effort, -R for Retarded Reddit quality shitpost
 
No1 gives a fuck, we arent feminists here to call normal natural human behaviour toxic, women love to look at/play as handsome guys, we knew it for long years, witcher series with geralt as protag is beloved by female audience- they get ultimate combo of alpha male top of the foodchain physical specimen coldblooded killer whos transformation was unique to not lose his feelings like other witchers did, women love that shit :)
I mean look at this shit, female celebs do it in the open:
 
Last edited:
It's weird how it's a lot more acceptable in some circles to lust over men characters than women characters.
 
Last edited:
These ideas never made sense to begin with and screamed that they were made by angry unsuccessful women. I don't know how these ideas ever caught on.
 
NO! My boy Leon is chaste and virtuous. He would never succumb to his carnal desires. And I can prove it:

 
Top Bottom