>>94195439>You know that isn't what I said. Why should it matter that the ones that are bi/gay are all slightly more masculine? It isn't a statement about all bi/gay women, only you are concluding that. By saying that, you're saying that the writers should feel restricted in how they write their characters to avoid stereotyping too much, which is my point, they shouldn't. If it were more than just a few characters, then maybe you'd have a point.
>YesI say no.
>Asami was also forceful, argumentative and outgoing. I don't want to get sidetracked on Asami, because it isn't the main point I'm trying to make here, but generally speaking, Asami is very feminine. Just look at pic related. Every person is going to have a mix of traditionally masculine and feminine traits.
> You can say everyone magically wrote themselves into the same corner way they had to make every slightly masculine women a lesbian but it doesn't change that I am still right.I don't even know what you're trying to say here. I'm not saying they have to make every 'masculine' women a lesbian at all, only that it shouldn't matter that that happens to be the case here.
>A baggy military jacket with trousers is masculineEh, fair enough. My main point still stands.