So, I'm not a fan of the Witcher. I've not read the books, and I've not played the games, and I probably won't ever, the reason for me being that games with pre-determined protagonists don't fit my taste. I've never played and probably won't play the Mass Effect series for the same reason.
However, that didn't stop me from reading the discussion this thread turned into with some interest.
I had a couple of thoughts, some of which may be tangential to the core of the discussion, but I'd like to state them anyway.
First, maybe the Witcher developers have practical business motivations other than DEI. The market share of female gamers has been rising over the last decade, from what I can tell from reading various sources. (I'm not prepared to back that statement up with specific sources, which would be needed if the discussion about it were more serious.) Maybe the developers just thought they could sell a Witcher game to more women if they provided an option for a female protagonist.
Question - Is the new game going to have *only* the female protagonist being discussed, or is this a choice between a male or female protagonist? If the new protagonist is female only, I would question their wisdom in possibly alienating a huge portion of their potential male market. I want good female representation in games, but I don't want to play as a female avatar and I won't buy a game where I can only do that, because I don't identify with a female avatar, which keeps me from the full self-immersion I want in a game.
Are any women here discussing this issue? I would be very interested in hearing a female gamer's take on this. I think any males-only discussion about female representation in gaming is suspect at best.
Okay, this second thing I thought of is way more tangential, so feel free to ignore this part: I was made to think of Robert Jordan's "Wheel of Time". That setting delves very deeply into the essence of male and female natures in opposition. In a nutshell, both men and women can wield "magic", referred to as "channeling the Source" in Jordan's setting, but the male half of the Source is tainted, such that male channelers are driven violently insane. Thus, men are legally forbidden to channel in the setting, and there is an entire government set up to deal with and police this fact, mostly run by women. The protagonist of the story setting happens to be a male who can channel.
To any Jordan fans, does this also tie into what is being discussed about the Witcher? If a game were made from Wheel of Time, would a similar potentially heated discussion about gender ideology be provoked?