I forgot Mindmaker, but I think it might be that there really are no female Varls or that they are extremely protected or something... The Varls seem to indicate that they are essentially a dying race anyhow.
Why do you say it like that? "very female inclusive" instead of just saying not sexist
Because it can easily be a setting that isn't sexist but just doesn't really include women in the action.
you keep saying documentary like it's a buzzword, I don't know if someone else did first but please stop it's getting annoying
Yes, two people when trying to form an argument about why "GTA shouldn't have prostitutes" say "well it isn't a documentary". It is either that or "ultra-realistic".
But on a different aspect of that; why is it bad, at all, for a game to have an equal-gender society in it? Hell, what's wrong with it having a female-dominated one?
Nothing, and while the "all female" one tends to go into "stupid" territory that is more a product of bad writing (Chances they will be genocidal hypocrites? 99%).
My beef is mostly with this idea that settings that are not going for ultra-realism or documentary style, should rewrite their narratives to include them and that not doing so is bad. That they should either pick between documentary or pure fantasy.
When Banner Saga does the exact opposite of that (Women do have less presence, they are forced into roles, and they are looked down upon... and no woman in the game really attempts to increase their lot... all based off of a fantasy Nordic society) and it still works even within this idea.
While Dungeons and Dragon's approach is mostly that sexism is more of a character trait. Which has lead to a VERY noticeable trend where if a game has outright sexism on display most of the time it will be from a man-mater. Which is usually their poor attempt to make social commentary, but it falls flat because sexism doesn't strongly exist as far as the narrative is concerned and thus these people just seem like jerks who hate guys because they are jerks.
I'm pretty sure most people aren't used to a society in which women are treated as little better than property, but if a game does that, it isn't questioned. Which gives something of an implication that that's okay, but the inverse isn't. And really, neither is okay(in real life). That's my issue with it.
I RARELY see games where women are treated as property to admit. Yet honestly, I don't see anything wrong with a game where that is true.
Heck "The Void" does that.
The reason why "It is ok" in a setting isn't because "it is right" but because settings do not have to pick and chose between right and wrong. Often it is the ambiguity of the setting that is more attractive.