Well, there are more than you think. The main character in "Phantasmagoria 2: A Puzzle Of The Flesh" is gay for example and indeed attending therapy about it where it comes up. When you start looking into games made in Japan you find tons of gay and lesbian characters, especially when you look under labels like "Yaoi" and "Yuri" and they don't always involve outright porn. That said when it DOES come to porn games you have the two part "Lightning Warrior Raidy" a sort of lite RPG/hentai game where the main character is about as lesbian as your going to get. "Loren Amazon Princess" is another game that features heavy lesbian elements, though it's not a sex game (unlike Lighting Warrior Raidy), Loren herself is pretty much a Lesbian amazon, your character who can be either male or female can be straight or gay in either direction with the various characters you run into (and that includes potentially romancing Loren).Swarles said:To get right down to it without getting into a whole spiel about it, there is a lack of protagonists in video games that fall outside of the heterosexual norm. Now I'm not talking about games like Mass Effect or Dragon Age where main characters can choose whether to be heterosexual or not. I'm talking about games where the protagonist has been written as being LGBTQ+. Off the top of my head I can only think of My Ex-Boyfriend the Space Tyrant and maybe Gone Home if we can stretch the definition of what constitutes a protagonist. Read Only Memories promises to be more LGBT friendly as a video game but it's not clear at whether or not the main character will be heterosexual.
This also isn't just a matter of inclusion. Yes I would like to see more protagonists that I can relate more closely to as a gay male but I that's not the only reason I would like more LGBT characters. There's just so many more varied stories you can tell if you don't just stick to the rigid formula that seems to be in place for video games.
I'm not saying I dislike games with heterosexual protagonists, I mean if I did what would I have to play. I also understand why there are not very many games with protagonists that are explicitly LGBTQ+, video games want to appeal to the core demographic of heterosexual 16-30 year old men and I get that. I just want a little more breaking of the mould.
Anyway, enough of me talking, I want to know the users' opinions on the matter.
To be honest, given that your dealing with such a small percentage of the population, and also a behavior (or state of being if you prefer) that is pretty much gross to the overwhelming number of norms, your dealing with pretty good representation in how often it does come up, and the simple fact that you can find entire series of games, albeit off the beaten path, that cater specifically to that. Not to mention that as much as you might not want to include them, games where you can choose gay romance options without the character being written in any particular way do count, especially when your dealing with something like "Mass Effect" with tons of dialogue and characterization behind the protagonist even if you get to name them. Indeed one of the big problems with "Mass Effect" has always been the lack of control and how things are so heavily written that what you select doesn't always wind up mattering as what you choose doesn't necessarily match what's going to come out of Shepard's mouth. Dragon Age "Origins" with it's silent lead is a case where you can make a better argument, but "Hawke" in Dragon Age II was again pretty heavily scripted and developed.
I don't think we need more, but time will tell if we see more. Honestly I think right now the whole gay rights movement has gotten offensive enough where it's begun discouraging people to want to work with it. The situation with Bioware for example hasn't gone unnoticed, where the writers decided to give gay options in a game, and then it became an entitlement where they were actually attacked for not having them in another project (The Old Republic Online) where it was touted as a major social issue. Ubisoft is getting similar treatment from liberals because they had a female protagonist in a game, and now it's seen as an entitlement that all of their games at least have the option for one. Basically nobody wants to work with these kinds of groups when they start making demands and telling you what you have to do with your games, or attacking you for exercising your own creative freedom.
My basic advice is to keep an eye out, and understand when dealing with a minority, you oftentimes have to look toward fringe sources. Your best bet as I pointed out, is to specifically do searches for "Yaoi" games or those with those elements, and you'll probably find a number of them from importers and the like. That said I imagine you'll see more representation as an option at least within the AAA market, assuming the gay rights movement can learn to zip it, and just go with the flow. By all means express appreciation for inclusion when it comes up, but when it goes so far as to attack someone for daring not to present gay alternatives to heterosexual romances (hey, maybe the writer just felt it didn't fit his characters, or not being gay just couldn't write it well) that's when you start to see problems.