veloper said:
CRPGs are the wish fulfillment genre, not AGs.
Point&click AGs have featured losers, anti-heroes and scumbags as the protagonist since the humble beginnings of the genre. You don't have to like or identify with the main character here no more than you have to in a novel or a movie. The characters only have to play their part in the story. A character's position is also not the same as the opinion of the writer.
Heck, Leisure Suit Larry is a mostly sympathetic sleazeball - but still a sleazeball at heart - and his early games are considered classics of the Adventure Game genre. So yeah, a protagonist being racist, sexist or even transphobic wouldn't be anything worthy of writing home about.
I mean, consider literature. Believable characters need flaws, especially if you're looking at literary genres like Realism or the works of someone like, say, Emile Zola. Effective world-building has to include at least some room for assholes or bigots, because no believable society could ever come across as being totally inclusive or flawlessly politically correct.
I'm reminded of someone I follow on Tumblr who writes surprisingly detailed and involved fanfics. There's a lot of wish-fulfillment in there and a lot of her and her buddies writing kinky stuff that gives them the warm fuzzies - and that's fine. The problem is she included a bigoted character for the sake of pathos and the source of some confrontation - because page after page of cuddling and everyday stuff eventually ends up going nowhere. Conflict moves stories forward, so that was a smart basic move on her part.
The thing is, someone messaged her and decided to be a concern troll, saying they couldn't believe anyone like her would include ableist, sexist and transphobic content in her fics. I stayed out of the issue because I'm more the type to prefer original material over fanfics and didn't want to press any potentially hot buttons - but a lot of people came up to remind the idiot that writers have the right to include offensive content in their works if it serves a purpose.
Ugliness or moral wretchedness are perfectly worthy tools to create content with. It's all in the dosage. All of one and you get an Aldous Huxley dystopia under the cover of idyllic events; all of the other and you get Hitler's Mein Kampf.