Guys, you need to get over your obsession with the game having to explicitly state it. The world/society knows sexism is bad. The world/society doesn't necessarily always know what sexism is. Games will almost never state it outright; it's more subtle.
But for example, take Dragon Age. They do give good examples of female characters in the main party, with Liliana, Morrigan, and Wynne, even if they do fulfill the Hecate Sisters(Maiden, Mother, Crone)(and yes I know Morrigan wasn't exactly motherly but she gets pregnant as part of the plot so she fits pretty damn well)(also, there's nothing inherently wrong with the Hecate Sisters trope, it's just done a lot). However, throughout the rest of the story? When women do come into play, they're typically shown fairly well as being equal, but the problem is that that rarely happens, and they're rarely in top positions of authority, particularly if military action is required of them. Secondary positions, yes. Primary, no. Whether it's King Aeducan and his sons, King Cailan and his male second Teyrn Loghain, Duncan of the Grey Wardens and his all male accompaniment into the deep roads during the dwarf backstory, Teyrn Cousland going off to war with his son, not his wife or a daughter, no female gray wardens other than possibly the PC during the Ostagar sequences, all but one of the senior enchanters being female(if I remember right), and the one female being both newly promoted and managing to fuck up her job after getting it to need the PC's help, and so on and so forth. Even the Dalish elves have some issues with it. Alone, none of these are a problem. But put them together, and you notice a trend. Even though the game says they're represented equally throughout Ferelden.