Can you be gay in divinity 2 directors cut
Even myself that maintain to be rather open finds it kinda awkward..
And i do express REALLY heavy handed.. you actually earn yelled at by npc.. and it kinda ruins the "fun and light" attitude of the game :\
i ponder personaly they could have cut it back with at least a 70%
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This blog is part of a series for the Salzburg Global LGBT* Forum’s program on LGBT* and Faith. Read more here: www.salzburgglobal.org/go/LGBT/blog
You can listen to Victor read his essay below.
“Hi Victor,
I want to introduce myself… I am a 42-year-old woman. I am a mother of a 14-year-old son. I currently dwell abroad with my partner. I knew I was diverse since I was very young. I used to proceed to church and to be very religious. Even if I felt that I do something against my accurate nature, I married a man. No surprise, things didn’t work. After a few years of intense struggle, I divorced. For another period, I continued to deny myself as a queer woman. In 2018, I met a special person who became my existence partner. Little by little I started to accept myself and to appear out to friends. I discovered your story on the internet and I have a scant questions for you.”“I follow your Facebook posts since you came out but I never dared to send you any message until now. I am a member of the Adventist church and I own a son who is like you. I mean he is gay. There is nobody in the church I could talk to about it. I promised my son I will explain you about him. It w
PavelNovotny wrote...
Even though I bought DA2 when it was released (Signature Edition - being a fanboy), I waited a couple weeks before playing it. I read a lot of the posts and was worried that the game was going to be a disappointment because of all the negativity about the new combat, the new dialog wheel, the romance choices (gay male ones - those are the only ones I care about), etc.
I didn't like Anders in Awakenings - thought he was a dork (Nathaniel Howe was much more interesting), so I wasn't looking forward to romancing him, and I didn't reflect Fenris was very attractive. I had already romanced Zevran as a Grey Warden, so the idea of dealing with another bisexual elf wasn't very exciting even though I like to play as an elf mage usually. Don't get me incorrect - I liked Zevran a lot - I would never want to romance Alistair (his traits was fine for friends, but too annoying as lovers).
I just finished the game today, and I have to say that the gay Fenris passion was wonderful. I believe it's the best homosexual romance I have ever seen in a western game, and I feel I have played every single one in life starting from when Aftermath 2 let you join the farmer's son.Источник: https://steamcommunity.com/app/435150/discussions/0/3223871682610686511/?l=italianNever Played Divinity.. act i need to initiate with Divinity Original Sin 1?Hey,
havent played any divinity game yet. In which way is the story connected? I would start with divinity 2 , if the story isnt connected( i would start with 1 if they would have a sale on it now.. there was a 40% sale once so i wont buy it for full price). But in which way is 2 an improvement in gameplay? Im a bit scared its like other games.. if ive started with the sequel, that i dont want to engage older games anymore... lead to they are less excellent and totally different.Segnala questo messaggio
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A REVIEW OF CONTEMPORARY MEDIANotes
[1] It will be clear later why I have insisted on both “gay” and “queer” as adjectives here. But let me tell at the outset that for me these terms are not collapsible (despite recent usage), yet are also not simply to be opposed in terms of generation, but rather in terms of a conceptual or ontological distinction. I take my cue from Moe Meyer, who argues that unlike the identities labeled “gay and lesbian,”
“Queer sexualities change into, then, a series of improvised performances whose threat lies in the denial of any social self derived from participation in those performances. As a refusal of sexually defined identity, this must also include a denial of the difference upon which such identities have been founded. And it is precisely in the vacuum of this refusal, in the deconstruction of the homo/hetero binary, that the threat and challenge to bourgeois ideology is queerly executed.” (3).
A more practical reason for the distinction is that not all men who participate in cruising and lesbian sex would identify as “gay men” (nor might they identify a