No, I meant exactly what I wrote and not your weird delusional take on what I wrote.
Not my problem if you can't recognize the objectification and reductionism, and hypocrisy, inherent in being unable to...oh, I dunno...analyze a woman character that shows cleavage, beyond said cleavage. Like Bayonetta.
Or the incapacity by certain involved parties to recognize "no-gear levels", or sudden core mechanic shifts, as common tropes in video games and by no means exclusive to women characters -- and from that, launch nonsensical polemic diatribes about women's empowerment. Like, say, Zero Suit Samus levels, and MGS2's naked Raiden level.
(Or for that matter, lack the mental capacity to add two and two on Raiden's feminized appearance as contrasted against basically every other character in the games with notable inclusion, as subtextual and prototypical commentary on masculinity and armed conflict)
Or, somehow quizzically come to a conclusion that grindhouse-era torture porn is empowering, but the whole-ass franchise that predates it is exploitative, simply for having depicted a woman character in touch with and unashamed of her own sexuality...all while simultaneously, paradoxically, laying claims to sex-positivity. Like Tomb Raider and it's "reboot".
Or, hey more contemporarily, declaring as game of the year a game that ostensibly prided itself on realistic depictions of human bodies, but
somehow got the whole "how deltoids, lats, and biceps work" wrong, in a game in which
a main character is supposed to be a bodybuilder and that they were a bodybuilder was a key selling point of that character's depiction. And more confusingly, decided a setting of a zombie apocalypse was a
really good place to make clumsy and self-contradictory commentary about Zionism...all while not being arsed to actually model a synagogue on...well,
an actual synagogue.
Oh, but I can hear the "muh mael gaze!" already...but here's a tip: when that's the
only thing you see, surprise, you're still being a sexist, objectifying pig.