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Miyamoto: In mainline Zeldas, Link will always be the hero, will consider S spin-offs

They don't need one, he's their character. Get over it.
Then why does anything about this series matter? When people create things they usually have reasons for them be they bad or good.

Essentially they don't want to in this case, and is that inherently wrong?
Of course, I'm just criticizing their decisions/reasons.

Neither can fans other than "I don't care what the creator wants. My feelings matter more"

This discussion is reminding me of the discussion of traditional feminism vs intersectional feminism.

"Oh as long as there's a white female Link, it doesn't matter that he can't be other races."
"But I thought the whole argument was anyone was equally likely of being a reincarnation?"

I kid...mostly



I've brought this up plenty of times. Link's gender is the only thing that matters in the topic of Nintendo's inclusivity
The fans don't really need a reason other then that. Doesn't make them right but I don't see this argument being made in other threads where fans aren't getting what they hope/wanted.

They don't need to come up with a sensible reason. If a creator makes a character male then that's the only reason why it needs to be male. They made the character that way.

If people aren't happy with that, then simply don't buy the game. I don't get why you think they need to give a sensible reason as to why they want Link to be male.
Creators can absolutely do whatever they want and people have the right criticize them for it. If you aren't happy with that then don't enter the discussion.
 
That's a great way to treat your fans. "We don't give a shit what you'd like and you sure as hell don't deserve an explanation as to why you're not getting it."

They don't NEED to have a reason. I don't see what the big deal is with people being curious about it though. I also don't see what the big deal is with wanting a change in a series people love. I'd never boycott a Zelda game because it didn't have a female lead, but I also think it could be an interesting change.

Not really sure what you get out of reminding people they're not owed anything by a corporation. People would like a see a change in a series they like. Plus Nintendo has done stuff like Linkle and not immediately responding to everyone initially think BotW Link was female.

http://gamerant.com/new-legend-of-zelda-without-link/

You're new to this debate aren't you? Also, what about the myriad of fans who don't want this change? Should they be ignored? Why should only those who do want this change be listened to?

Then why does anything about this series matter? When people create things they usually have reasons for them be they bad or good.
...and they're reason is that they created Link as a male, and that's how they want him to be, that's all there is to it. Expecting them to give some lore or in world explanation, when they themselves don't give two squirts of piss about the timeline of the series, is silly.
 
The fans don't really need a reason other then that. Doesn't make them right but I don't see this argument being made in other threads where fans aren't getting what they hope/wanted.

Creators can absolutely do whatever they want and people have the right criticize them for it. If you aren't happy with that then don't enter the discussion.

Fan dislikes creator's choice: "They suck and I need to tell you why!"

Fan likes creator's choice: "It's their decision; stop complaining about it!"
 
...ok, that sounds fair, they would not make Luigi the main character of a mainline Mario game

Mario's name is in the title, If they made a Super Luigi Brothers (Like the Wii U one) it would automatically be a spinoff, or have a misleading name. But "The Legend of Zelda" is a spinoff if Zelda is the main character? Says who? I don't know I just don't see why it isn't possible.

Also, Metal Gear Solid 2 had a female protag, why not Zelda? :^)
 
You do that, that is fine. My intention was to point out that generally speaking people don't have a problem with criticizing the creator of a property or his vision. He or she is not immune from that.
No one gives a shit about George Lucas and his intentions for Jar-Jar Binks.
It seems incomparable considering that Zelda's creators haven't violated any of their world building, lore, and general tradition. Fans are allowed to criticize. In this case, it seems a bit goofy because the creators haven't changed anything that fans have grown accustomed to and some fans are actually upset by that.
 
Sarcastically out of very real bitterness



Most of them have no relation. They're reincarnations

Reincarnations yes, but Wind Waker Link is specifically said to have absolutely jack shit to do with the Hero. He's literally just a random kid caught up in Ganondorf's mess, worthy enough to wield the Master Sword and the Triforce of Courage. The spirit of the hero means jack if you're worthy enough :P.
 
http://gamerant.com/new-legend-of-zelda-without-link/

You're new to this debate aren't you? Also, what about the myriad of fans who don't want this change? Should they be ignored? Why should only those who do want this change be listened to?

People who are that adamant that Link must be male have had their way for decades. Not every Link going forward would need to be female. Seems really bizarre to worry about people who want a male Link being ignored.

Read the article, not sure what your point is.
 
I think you're overreaching on exactly what people are accusing Nintendo of. Most of the sarcasm I've seen is thrown less at Nintendo and more at the people forcefully defending their choice with this game. With regard to Nintendo the reaction I'm seeing is less anger and more disappointment, especially since their explanation for their choice seems kind of flimsy.

I see what you're saying, I've been on this roller coaster to long I guess, it's gotten straight nasty in some corners of this discussion else ware. The interesting thing about this discussion to me though is that it's basically going around in circles. I'm not sure what else can be said other than. "Nintendo has no real reason not to do it, but they don't want too."

This implies a fixed sex and gender on the spirit of the hero. Some of us don't want that.

Honestly, they said as much in their first statement on it.
 
This whole make link a girl thing is weird, pick your battles

It seems incomparable considering that Zelda's creators haven't violated any of their world building, lore, and general tradition. Fans are allowed to criticize. In this case, it seems a bit goofy because the creators haven't changed anything that fans have grown accustomed to and some fans are actually upset by that.

They've shut down really specific possibilities that were previously possible within the world building and lore though. Don't think there are any other Nintendo series with explicit reincarnations of the main character.

They've also shut down Zelda as a main character in the mainline series.
 
Fans throwing up a stink at not getting to dictate what the creator of a series wants with his character =/= The creator treating their fans like shit. A creator is obligated to explain everything about their decision just because some fans demand it
Again, I agree there's no obligation. But communication is always appreciated and there's no reason not to be open about something like this. An answer shouldn't have to be "demanded," it's really not a big deal.

"Hey, I really like your game and have a question about the design of the main character."

"How dare you ask me to defend my decisions!! I owe you nothing!!!"
 
This implies a fixed sex and gender on the spirit of the hero. Some of us don't want that.
I get some people wanting a choice, it's fine. But this guy acting like the idea of a fixed iconic character through decades of a very iconic series staying exactly as he is as difficult to grasp as finding the formula to fucking curing AIDs. The level of cringe in his post was at a pretty all time high.

Personally for people who want to play as a female, I would just ask for Zelda to star or create a new character in the Zelda universe. But I've never really been a fan of pick 3,000 things to make your character. I even hate it when mainline Final Fantasy games ask me to change the character's name. No fuckers, keep it as is and let me experience that world. ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
 
Aonuma said “...if we have princess Zelda as the main character who fights, then what is Link going to do?"

Miyamoto said that "Link will always be the hero," of the mainline series. If they've giving/coming up with reasons why Zelda can't be the main character of the main series, and that they always want a boy Link as the lead, then they want the leads to be male. That's not a misinterpretation or twisting of their words — that's merely a takeaway from what they've said.

I've already discussed spinoffs in this thread:
Maybe Aonuma himself thinks he needed better wording. The subsequent statements would probably support that.

The statements would also support the idea of these "fans" moving goalposts. The games state Link is a reincarnation of an ancient male hero. Said fans said the lore doesn't count, so Aonuma/Miyamoto flat-out say "Link is male". Now the fans can't handle that.

It's not sexist; it doesn't exclude girls/women from enjoying the games. Link is male, that's all.

Hyrule Warriors is definitely not the kind of game I want a Zelda-led spin-off to be. However, its existence doesn't preclude the potential for proper Zelda-led titles.
 
They dont want a female Link.That is all folks! Just let developers do the games they want to do, and then you just enjoy them. This female Link thing is getting a bit boring. Even worst considering that 70% of the people asking for a female Link have never played a Zelda game before....

And where are you getting this from?
 
Again, I agree there's no obligation. But communication is always appreciated and there's no reason not to be open about something like this. An answer shouldn't have to be "demanded," it's really not a big deal.

"Hey, I really like your game and have a question about the design of the main character."

"How dare you ask me to defend my decisions!! I owe you nothing!!!"

But they actually have tried on multiple occasions to explain it. Your hypothetical answer has never been what Nintendo has actually done. In fact this whole discussion has blown up because they didn't simply do as you stated!
 
Edit: sorry if I missed some answers, took longer than expected to write this whole post.

Implication doesn't require intent. What makes you think it does?

If someone wanted to play as Zelda in a Zelda game, they now have Hyrule Warriors which doesn't play like a Zelda game. Seems you're actually missing the point that someone who wanted Zelda playable in a Zelda game will not be appeased by getting Zelda in a spinoff. If it's a different genre — in that it plays completely different and, in Zelda's case, will not tie into the story of the mainline series — it's essentially a different series. Does that make sense?

And about the main character of the series: developers having freedom to make choices doesn't absolve those choices of being met with criticism. If the creators give bad reasoning, people will call them out on that (and Aonuma's reasons were indisputably bad). If they say the series is about Link and that Link is an established, defined character, then people are within their right to make well-founded observations about the way that character's been portrayed, compare those comments to others made (since the beginning of the series and within the last decade), and so forth.

I ask again: Why is the gender of the main character seen as a big risk? Or as risky as Metroid: Other M's narrative and perspective shift? How in the world are the gameplay systems in BotW less of a risk than a girl Link option, or having Zelda be playable within the existing Zelda template (or just within BotW's template)? You speak as if Nintendo isn't interested in augmenting sales, that having a girl Link option where/when feasible is any more "evolutionary," compared to everything shown of BotW during E3, and that there exists a line between all the new things added to the series with BotW and having a separate character model for Link. None of that makes sense, and you're purporting that it's all a given.

For your first paragraph, of course that makes sense, but your original reply had nothing to do with mine. Hyrule Warriors is indeed a different series, in a different genre, appealing to different people (the usual Warriors spinoff goal being to attract other franchises fans into Warriors gameplay, and Warriors fans into other franchises), but it doesn't mean that publishers don't look at the feedback to create other stuff. Fans loved the many female characters available in HW, Miyamoto talked after that about a Shiek spinoff. It's likely they are trying little by little to see where they can go, with HW being more of an hommage, and thus with less risks than directly trying another action-adventure game (but more action focused for example).

I completely agree on Aonuma's excuses being bad, but he's not trained for that. It's the equivalent of that stupid Ubisoft guy saying female character models were hard to animate as the reason of AC not having a female playable character. Miyamoto doesn't care since nobody will dare blame him for whatever he says at this point. Reggie or Bill, being in PR, would probably give better excuses while being as vague as possible.
Fans can obviously have their opinion about characters, but that's the thing, casual fans and regular players won't. Those are the hardcore fans always complaining about something (right or wrong), be it gender issues, timeline stuff, gameplay not being exactly like they wanted, X companion talking too much or not enough, etc. When your series has been popular for thirty years, you have to find the right position to be able to appeal to both without compromising your game's formula either (which was kind of Sonic's problem).

So, again, for Link, this is a bigger risk than 25 years ago or so, since they've followed a template for a long, long time and basically established this character (again, without him being "technically" established at the same time) and the game's genre (this is not an RPG where it's easier to switch after a while). This point mainly applies to having a female Link or a new character being playable, or even a less known/popular one (like Impa), not Zelda herself. Zelda herself, on the other hand, need a change of portrayal and to start being more popular, which is another problem that they have been trying to solve over the years, especially since they went 3D (Spirit Track, Sheik, Smash, Hyrule Warriors, Tetra...).
Of course they are interested in having more sales, but in this case, having a defined character is not seen as the problem (same for Mario or Metroid), the problem was using the same formula in terms of gameplay (which is the most important thing for Nintendo).
You can rightfully argue that this wouldn't change anything in terms of gameplay, but that is the issue. Why should they do it when they have a well designed character in a thirty years old franchise? Why put Zelda playable in a main game when it is supposed to be about Link?
The best you could expect in the next decade could be some switch at some point, like Ciri in Witcher 3 (it's still very much a Geralt game) if you truly want to force into the main games, but pushing Nintendo for a true spin-off in a similar genre with a strong female protagonist is actually the best thing to do and the only thing that they will accept (for better and for worse). They are perfectly in their right to stay with Link since, once again, they have other games (a lot) catering to other expectations.

What if you had a choice to play as a different character, like Luigi, Peach or Toad?

You mean like in Super Mario 3D World? You're probably referencing this, which was focused on multiplayer.
Another Mario Galaxy or Sunshine, aka focused on single player adventures and a bigger story "focus" (for a Mario platformer I mean), they very likely won't allow this choice. Apart from Luigi obviously, since he's basically just an easy interchangeable copy of Mario (and I don't mean only in a gameplay sense).

It's amazing that they seem to not understand that Link can still be the MC just with the option to play as male or female.
Shame seeing so many people put down other for wanting that option. Hopefully like the industry, they grow up.

It's also amazing how some people can't stand that the creators themselves have the final word on something. They grew up. Did you?

And they can't come up with sensible reason why that is.

Does a creator have to give a "sensible" reason for every choice he makes? They don't want to, for various reasons (including Link being pretty much established in the collective mind), most of those that we'll never know about like for absolutely every work out there, be it art, game, cinema, etc.
 
People who are that adamant that Link must be male have had their way for decades. Not every Link going forward would need to be female. Seems really bizarre to worry about people who want a male Link being ignored.

Read the article, not sure what your point is.
And why should their favorite character be changed to appease others? They said they're open to a playable Zelda in spinoffs, so there's your female character, and everyone is happy. Plus the developers continue to keep their character the way they choose it to be, thus making the idea of a female Link irrelevant.

Also, you said they didn't respond immediately about Link being male, that article and quote came out a day or two after the 2014 footage of Zelda U, confirming Link was the protag and male, they didn't leave this up to speculation, they shot it down pretty quickly.

Likewise Linkle was made because the director of DW wanted to make something akin to her, Aonuma stepped in and made her less like Link, making your whole idea about them "teasing" or "testing the waters" for this idea completely inaccurate.

What "battles" should we be picking? Or is this the "starving kids in Africa" deflection?
Well for starters arguing for a playable female lead that doesn't change or alter the existing male lead would be a good idea.
 
The problem is people don't want to criticize, they want the developers to actually implement change to conform to their specific wishes/wants.

Which just isn't going to happen (if Miyamoto/Aonomua's words are truthful) in this case/instance/series. You are free to discuss why you think why it would be great, insightful, or even revolutionary if Link was to be female; but to claim Nintendo is sexist, out of touch, and doesn't listen to fans is beyond silly.
 
What "battles" should we be picking? Or is this the "starving kids in Africa" deflection?
I think the insinuation is that some people are treating Link being female as some big gender barrier that will change gaming where their efforts could be better spent on actual sexist games. Some people want Link to be female for the sake of a female Link. Some people want Link to be female because of an agenda.
 
And where are you getting this from?
Camarasketch did a poll of people who make posts about a female Link. The methodology is up to standard, he made sure to randomly sample a representative pool of respondents. Hard to believe 70% of people talking about the main character of an extremely popular, decades-old game series on a message board about video games have never played a single entry of said game, but those are the facts.
 
Maybe Aonuma himself thinks he needed better wording. The subsequent statements would probably support that.

The statements would also support the idea of these "fans" moving goalposts. The games state Link is a reincarnation of an ancient male hero. Said fans said the lore doesn't count, so Aonuma/Miyamoto flat-out say "Link is male". Now the fans can't handle that.

It's not sexist; it doesn't exclude girls/women from enjoying the games. Link is male, that's all.

Hyrule Warriors is definitely not the kind of game I want a Zelda-led spin-off to be. However, its existence doesn't preclude the potential for proper Zelda-led titles.

People supported/believed in the possibility of gender difference between reincarnations because the lore never outright demanded that Link be a boy. Most interpretations of reincarnation across different media/cultures/religions involve change of gender, species, etc. since those spirits or w/e are being reborn.

These Links are indisputably distinctly different characters born in different times, and some people never considered the gender at all central to the plots/themes/lore/etc. The only lore justification given for Link "needing" to be male so far is the "balance of the Triforce" stuff which doesn't make sense or doesn't translate well at all.

The possible spinoffs for Zelda don't preclude full-on Zelda-like titles starring Zelda, but the comments about how Link will be the only hero for the series suggests otherwise. They believe Zelda can't go on TLoZ-like adventures.
 
I see what you're saying, I've been on this roller coaster to long I guess, it's gotten straight nasty in some corners of this discussion else ware. The interesting thing about this discussion to me though is that it's basically going around in circles. I'm not sure what else can be said other than. "Nintendo has no real reason not to do it, but they don't want too."

I agree, but the issue there is when people want to do something sexist or otherwise discriminatory with their work—and I'm not saying Nintendo is doing that here—it's easy for them to say, "That's just what I want to do." So it's a valuable exercise to examine the reasons behind those choices, because sometimes you do find sexism, racism or what have you behind those decisions, and when you do, it should be challenged. And when those reasons don't seem like particularly good ones, it's worth looking even more closely at them.

It's not going to change

It very well could. Not for BotW in all likelihood, but Aonuma or whoever makes the next Zelda game could easily pivot on the issue, especially after seeing all the feedback. And it's not like Nintendo has ever traditionally been averse to female protagonists, or even a female Link, which they put in Hyrule Warriors.
 
Female Link is and always will be a terrible idea perpetuated by people who'd rather have a man dressed as a woman as the heroine than see Zelda finally get her time in the spotlight. It's stupid and its proponents are more rabid than rational.

That said, I'll never say no to a game that lets you play as Zelda as much as some Marios let you play as Peach.
 
They've shut down really specific possibilities that were previously possible within the world building and lore though. Don't think there are any other Nintendo series with explicit reincarnations of the main character.

They've also shut down Zelda as a main character in the mainline series.

I get that it was possible and now it's not something on the table but their decisions haven't violated any spoken or unspoken rule of the series. I understand fan disappointment in not getting something they wanted. The reaction seems overblown and I think people are being silly nannies about it. Of course, this is all about my opinion and debating about it won't get us very far.

That Zelda point is a more interesting debate and I suspect that it might be a gameplay issue that Nintendo hasn't wanted to address. Zelda gets things done a lot differently than Link.
 
Good.

But regardless, people will keep begging for a female link until the end of time, sadly.

I would love a Zelda game that focuses on someone other than Link though, a woman, that would be great. Why not focus on that rather than repeatedly trying to get Nintendo to change an established character?
 
But they actually have tried on multiple occasions to explain it. Your hypothetical answer has never been what Nintendo has actually done. In fact this whole discussion has blown up because they didn't simply do as you stated!
I was responding to you saying they were under no obligation to provide an explanation, not commenting on what they've actually done.

I'm not sure why you felt the need to remind everyone they don't need to address anything if they don't want to when they already have.
 
It seems incomparable considering that Zelda's creators haven't violated any of their world building, lore, and general tradition.

I strongly disagree, but let us leave it at that. The discussion has been had a dozen times.

In this case, it seems a bit goofy because the creators haven't changed anything that fans have grown accustomed to and some fans are actually upset by that.

I think this is an unfair way to approach this. People are just much more outspoken about the issues in gaming these days, notably representation. I think it is okay for a company to make this decision and I'm sure this would not have blown up as much, if Nintendo had handled this better. That said, Nintendo is not exactly a role model when it comes to female protagonists. Their only franchise with an exclusively female protagonist is clearly B-level, has been treated poorly and is currently comatose. I'm sure these things didn't help them in this discussion. I doubt we would have this discussion if Nintendo had actually put out or announced a (big effort) spin-off game.
 
Of course, I'm just criticizing their decisions/reasons.

I'm honestly not sure what you're saying here. Do you mean that not giving a female option or making Zelda playable in the main series is inherently wrong or that it isn't? Either way I agree that you have every right to disagree with the creators vision.

I agree, but the issue there is when people want to do something sexist or otherwise discriminatory with their work—and I'm not saying Nintendo is doing that here—it's easy for them to say, "That's just what I want to do." So it's a valuable exercise to examine the reasons behind those choices, because sometimes you do find sexism, racism or what have you behind those decisions, and when you do, it should be challenged. And when those reasons don't seem like particularly good ones, it's worth looking even more closely at them.

It very well could. Not for BotW in all likelihood, but Aonuma or whoever makes the next Zelda game could easily pivot on the issue, especially after seeing all the feedback. And it's not like Nintendo has ever traditionally been averse to female protagonists, or even a female Link, which they put in Hyrule Warriors.

I see what you're saying, but I don't really see malice behind the intentions, just that the creators have an idea for the characters portrayals and that's at odds with some of the fans ideas. Also Linkle isn't a female Link, seriously she's basically a joke character.
 
And why should their favorite character be changed to appease others?

Works both ways. Why should people who'd like to see a female Link be shut down to appease people who've gotten their way for decades?

Need citation for Link being the favorite character of everyone getting defensive over the idea of a female Link.
 
It's just weird to me that they've been able to justify making games called the Legend of Zelda where Zelda barely appears, but a Legend of Zelda game starring Zelda? Whoa now, whoa now. Crazy talk.

This. This is one of the biggest reasons why this issue will never die.
 
They dont want a female Link.That is all folks! Just let developers do the games they want to do, and then you just enjoy them. This female Link thing is getting a bit boring. Even worst considering that 70% of the people asking for a female Link have never played a Zelda game before....

Thank you .
 
I think the insinuation is that some people are treating Link being female as some big gender barrier that will change gaming where their efforts could be better spent on actual sexist games. Some people want Link to be female for the sake of a female Link. Some people want Link to be female because of an agenda.
I think both efforts are equally important. Sexism in games doesn't go away because we beat up on obviously sexist games (which there are few) but the sexist elements in other wise fine games. Overall, people wanting a female link is not going to stop the "actual" progress in games.

Also, what could be that agenda and how could it possibly be a bad one?

I'm honestly not sure what you're saying here. Do you mean that not giving a female option or making Zelda playable in the main series is inherently wrong or that it isn't? Either way I agree that you have every right to disagree with the creators vision.
Sorry, forgot the not in "Of course not".
 
mvmVnYW.gif
 
This. This is one of the biggest reasons why this issue will never die.

Kind of ridiculous to get upset about that considering the original game in the series established you playing as Link in order to save Zelda.

I could see this crazy expectation holding weight if the original game had you play as Zelda, but let's not act like it's crazy a legend of Zelda game doesn't have Zelda as the playable character, because you're thirty years late in making any valid points on that one.
 
Works both ways. Why should people who'd like to see a female Link be shut down to appease people who've gotten their way for decades?

Need citation for Link being the favorite character of everyone getting defensive over the idea of a female Link.

Where did I say that everyone who didn't want this viewed Link as their favorite character? All I said was that some felt that way.

Also, because that's the way the character was designed and has been designed since day one, changing him changes a significant part of the game, not changing him does nothing and that's it. There's no inherent issue with Link being a male, and the idea that there's few female protags is not a issue that all games should have to address and it's definitely not a issue that Zelda, the series with it's entire mythology dominated by women, needs to try to fix.
I think both efforts are equally important. Sexism in games doesn't go away because we beat up on obviously sexist games (which there are few) but the sexist elements in other wise fine games. Overall, people wanting a female link is not going to stop the "actual" progress in games.

Also, what could be that agenda and how could it possibly be a bad one?


Sorry, forgot the not in "Of course not".
"sexism in games" is not an issue that all games need to tackle, and there's next to nothing in Zelda that I'd call sexist, so why this issue of "sexism in games" is being applied to a thirty year old character is beyond me. There's nothing wrong with a character that's male, and there's nothing wrong with that character staying male. There's also nothing wrong with a series never having a female protagonist. In fact it's outright silly to assume that all games need or should have one at some point.
 
Because I don't think many people are interested in making a hero who looks radically different from what we're used to. But it's easy to make Link either male or female while still adhering closely to the traditional look. The early speculation about BotW Link speaks to that.

But I thought the main argument toward a female Link was that "there is no traditional look so why no change him into a girl"?

Really, the fact that people are asking for Link to be a girl rather than "Zelda main character" speak miles, there is an unconscious acknowledgement that Link IS an iconic character at this point.
 
Link being considered an established character and not a interchangeable avatar = good. I always thought he was just as much a character as Mario, Samus, Fox, etc.

Nintendo outright refusing to make Zelda the main character at any time in the main series = not good. I don't see how it would be difficult, especially when they're discussing changing up the Zelda formula. Making the girl who the series is named for the lead in at least one game isn't gonna be the end of the world.
 
Where did I say that everyone who didn't want this viewed Link as their favorite character? All I said was that some felt that way.

Also, because that's the way the character was designed and has been designed since day one, changing him changes a significant part of the game, not changing him does nothing and that's it. There's no inherent issue with Link being a male, and the idea that there's few female protags is not a issue that all games should have to address and it's definitely not a issue that Zelda, the series with it's entire mythology dominated by women, needs to try to fix.
I'm not seeing the "some feel this way" disclaimer in your post.

I agree Link being male isn't an issue. I just don't see why having a female Link IS an issue. The series doesn't have an obligation to answer for the crimes of a male-dominated industry, or whatever nonsense you're talking about, but clearly there's some people who would like to see a female Link and I don't see the harm in it.

I'd love to know the average age of posters in this thread. It's lustrous to me that an adult would have a strong opinion that's it's vitally important that a video game series have a male main character. Just imagine the consequences if Nintendo made a change to a character whose been around for decades! My small mind can't begin to wrap itself around the consequences!
 
That said, Nintendo is not exactly a role model when it comes to female protagonists. Their only franchise with an exclusively female protagonist is clearly B-level, has been treated poorly and is currently comatose. I'm sure these things didn't help them in this discussion.

What games have they even released on their xurrent systems that only have male playable characters? People keep bringing this up, but they hardly release single character based games anymore. In fact, looking at a list of Nintendo developed/second party games released for the Wii U and 3DS that only ones that only have males are:

Star Fox Zero
Kid Icarus Uprising
Devil's Third
Sakura Samurai
Dillon's Rolling Western
Harmoknight
Mario & Luigi: Dream Team
Mario & Luigi: Paper Jam

edit: Forgot a few
 
This is getting really boring

You guys are obsessed over a matter that really shouldn't even exists

I hope Nintendo never speaks again and do whatever they want to do

And if this don't like you then don't buy the game (and then we'll laugh because you didn't buy a good game because they didn't let you choose to control a female character)
 
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