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MSN: Gamers are Fighting Back Against "Hogwarts Legacy" with a Trans-Friendly Fantasy Game Pack-"Trans Witches are Witches"

He actually used transfiguration to look more like a snake. He was considered very handsome before his experimentation on himself to look the way he wanted.
By the broad definition of Trans, which doesn't just mean between genders, that make him Trans as in being half-snake.

Of course I hold no ill will to snake-kind, Lamias are some of my favorite monster races.
 
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Redneckerz

Those long posts don't cover that red neck boy
The gross majority are physical games made by folks who by their quality of writing do LARPing as a job.

How is this owning on Hogwarts Legacy or JK Rowling? I went through it all, there is at best 5 decent indies in there. The other 63 feel like ChatGPT made them up.

Or is the T in ChatGPT standing for trans now?
 
Thanks. And cheers everyone. All over a single Tweet. So daft.

But yeah, all the nomencalures and terms made up doesn't overwrite science and biology.

Eddie-Griffin Eddie-Griffin I'm not going to even ask :messenger_tears_of_joy: All these acronyms.. I can't.

The media takes them and pushed them as into the mainstream which is why these terms keep sticking despite not making much sense in isolation.

But let's be frank here, several are playing this game and outside maybe a handful of people, aren't touching any of those 69 games in that pack.
 
Angry, unreasonable people. Everything is bigotry today and nobody can speak their mind anymore. So tired of all this.
Be whatever you wish to be, fine by me. Just leave us alone and don't force the rest to lie and avoid reality.
Hogwarts Legacy Is gorgeous btw, I needed something to bring back those Skyrim-Witcher vibes...
 

ZoukGalaxy

Member
I will not even give 1$ for those "crehaters"

I would prefer to give 1000$ to any animal charities, animals are 10000x better than those people spreading HATE.
Not trans people, but THOSE deep shit people like Retardera.
 
actually, & going by sales figures & player reviews:

disinformation: 'gamers are fighting back against hogwarts legacy'
information: 'gamers are playing & enjoying hogwarts legacy'...
 

ssringo

Member
Currently they've made $155k which split between the 56"creators" is nearly $3k each. Probably more than most, or all, would've ever gotten for their stuff anyways.

Decent grift I suppose considering it took very little effort.
 

PeteBull

Member
So.... 1316 people bought the bundle...

That's hardly massive amounts of support. Like I think Lawbreakers sold more than that.
even the woke ppl can recognise good game, proof is in how many times they made hogwarts legacy topics on resetera and got banned/deleted posts coz of that xD
 
Currently they've made $155k which split between the 56"creators" is nearly $3k each. Probably more than most, or all, would've ever gotten for their stuff anyways.

Decent grift I suppose considering it took very little effort.

IF those creators are receiving 100% of what's split and the hosts aren't taking a cut somewhere.
 
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IF those creators are receiving 100$ of what's split and the hosts aren't taking a cut somewhere.

Hmm I assumed the profits would be going to some kind of charity, but it doesn't seem to say anything about that.

I suppose buying the worthless bundle is a form of charity in and of itself.
 

mcjmetroid

Member
Wow shouldn't they like.. let this one go at this point? It's clearly a major loss for them and reeeeeeally embarrassing for them... They seem to keep wanting to remind us the boycott failed and that they're minor league.
 
JCPmkRK.jpg
 
Game Rant tried to make an article saying we no longer need Harry Potter and to move on with nonsensical reasoning, and the backlash was so swift and heavy, Game Rant quickly deleted the post, buried the tags and meta, and pretended it never happened.

But Eddie found the tape,
https://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:54xdOquBo8cJ:https://gamerant.com/harry-potter-not-needed-move-on/&cd=1&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=us (Google deleted archived here, https://archive.is/UwMnI

While the franchise is still active, it’s no longer the cultural juggernaut it once was. In recent years, the nostalgia for the original series has been overshadowed by poorly-received spin-offs and controversies around the books’ author. So with Harry Potter only becoming more and more divisive by the day, it may be time to finally bid farewell to the Wizarding World.

The Author Who Must Not Be Named

The most obvious source of controversy within the Harry Potter franchise is, of course, the franchise itself. Every recent entry in the series has been met with a steady decline in positive reception from fans. While the original Fantastic Beasts film was generally well-received, the same cannot be said for its critically-panned sequels. Notably, last year’s The Secrets of Dumbledore was the lowest-grossing film in the franchise’s history. Similarly, the Harry Potter and the Cursed Child stage play has become divisive among the fanbase. While some have praised it as a thrilling theater experience, others have taken issue with its story, which has often been compared to a bad fanfic. And of course, the newly released Hogwarts Legacy video game has already proven polarizing among fans and critics alike.

However, the greatest controversy around the Harry Potter series comes from the books’ author, J.K. Rowling. Over the past few years, Rowling has become notorious for her increasingly outspoken statements against the transgender community, which have been widely criticized as transphobic. And during a time when anti-trans rhetoric is louder than ever among conservatives around the world, it’s no wonder that many fans don't feel comfortable supporting a creator who is complicit in spreading such prejudice. Rowling’s name has become a blight on the franchise, to the point that the likes of Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson, Rupert Grint, Eddie Redmayne, and more have all publicly denounced Rowling’s anti-trans comments.

Alas, transphobia isn’t all that Rowling has been accused of. For instance, there’s her depiction of the goblins throughout the Harry Potter series. They’re consistently portrayed as long-nosed, greedy bankers who are conniving and untrustworthy by nature: the resemblance to common antisemitic stereotypes should be obvious. And then there’s the matter of Cho Chang, the lone East Asian character within the books. Not only does she have a Korean name — a grammatically incorrect one, at that — despite being Chinese, said name also bears an uncomfortable resemblance to a certain racist phrase.

Additionally, despite Rowling’s much-publicized declaration that Albus Dumbledore is gay, there’s no actual depiction of his sexuality within the books. Even in the Fantastic Beasts movies, the focus on Dumbledore and Grindelwald’s past romance is kept to a bare minimum. And in an era where queer representation has become normalized, that’s just not enough for many fans. Of course, as problematic a figure as Rowling has become, there are some who still argue that this shouldn’t impact fans’ enjoyment of the series. And indeed, there are many times when it’s necessary to separate the art from the artist. But in the case of Harry Potter, that’s easier said than done: Rowling’s controversial politics are more deeply ingrained into the narrative of the series than one might think.

The Magic is Gone

Though the story of Harry Potter begins as a straightforward good vs. evil tale, it quickly becomes complicated by the introduction of systemic racism within the wizarding world. Not only is there widespread prejudice against muggles and muggle-born wizards, house-elf slavery is also a common practice. Not only is the ideology of wizard supremacy responsible for the rise of Voldemort, it’s also a source of corruption within the Ministry of Magic. However, this systemic injustice ultimately goes unchallenged by our heroes.

Yes, Harry frees Dobby from Lucius Malfoy, and he routinely stands up to series’ bigoted antagonists. But at no point does he show any interest in actually changing things for the better on a larger scale. Though Harry’s defeat of Voldemort is treated within the story as the end of the evils plaguing the wizarding world, society hasn’t actually changed for the better. It’s simply gone back to how it was before Voldemort took over — which is still an oppressive nightmare for anyone who isn’t a pureblood wizard.

In the same epilogue that ends with the words “All was well,” Harry is mentioned to still be the master of the house-elf Kreacher. Not only does slavery still exist, Harry himself is a slave-owner, and the moral implications of this are never questioned. In fact, the institution of house-elf slavery is never challenged at all by anyone besides Hermione, whose abolitionist beliefs are treated as a joke by the story. As far as the story is concerned, the problem with the house-elves isn’t slavery itself, but the existence of bad slave-owners. It should go without saying that this is an incredibly questionable ethical stance for a children’s book series to take.

Time and time again, the evils faced by Harry and friends, from the Death Eaters to Dolores Umbridge to the Dementors of Azkaban, are all shown to be products of the prejudice inherent in the systems of wizard society. But by the time the series is over, those systems are still exactly the same. Instead of dismantling the corrupt establishment, Harry has simply become another cog in the machine: an Auror, essentially a wizard cop. The world of Harry Potter is one where things will never be better than they are now. Maintaining the status quo, no matter how unjust, is the ultimate moral good, and the only ones who seek to change the system are the villains.

The Franchise That Died

This may have seemed normal to young readers back in the 2000s. But now, those same readers are adults, many of whom have taken notice of the countless social issues plaguing the world. And in today’s political climate, it’s easy to see why so many fans have become disillusioned with the wizarding world that once captured their imaginations. That’s not to say that the Harry Potter series was always bad, or that it’s wrong to still love it despite its faults — after all, there’s a reason it became such a phenomenon in the first place. The wizarding world and its characters still hold a special place in the hearts of many people, even those who are against Rowling’s politics.

However, between the Rowling controversies, the problematic elements of the original series, and the negative reception of recent installments, the best course of action for the franchise may be to stop altogether before more damage can be done. Of course, that won’t happen while more money can be made from it. But despite all the culture wars and cash-grab spin-offs, the Harry Potter series is nowhere near as relevant to pop culture as it once was, and perhaps that’s for the best. It may be time for the story of the Boy Who Lived to become the franchise that died. And hopefully, a new series will come along to take its place — one that’s more resonant with the current times.

Poor Game Rant is really taking this hard.
 
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dave_d

Member
Game Rant tried to make an article saying we no longer need Harry Potter and to move on with nonsensical reasoning, and the backlash was so swift and heavy, Game Rant quickly deleted the post, buried the tags and meta, and pretended it never happened.

But Eddie found the tape,
https://webcache.googleusercontent....-not-needed-move-on/&cd=1&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=us





Poor Game Rant is really taking this hard.

And if you thought Evil Google wouldn't erase this cached content you would be sadly mistaken.
 
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