KiNgBrAdLeY7: Art is meant to be free, and art is liberal. Those who don't understand Art, should either leave it alone, or stop buggering others who appreciate it as is.
So if you don't like a work as is, you should shut up about it? Forgive me, but I call bullshit. It's only through developers being called out on their mistakes that they learn how to avoid said mistakes. If a writer used poor grammar, wrote one dimensional characters, or otherwise practiced their craft poorly, any criticism would be well earned. Either that or you are insinuating that by virtue of criticizing certain aspects of an art, one is demonstrating an inability to understand it, which leads to the same result of shutting up; it's not exactly clear which version you intended to communicate, but either way, my response is the same: bullshit. If anything, in order for one to be able to form any kind of in depth opinion about any given entry into any given art form, at least a base understanding of the art form is necessary, and a deeper understanding of the art form can lead one to identify flaws that might otherwise have gone unnoticed due to one's ignorance of how the art functions.
Mind, this is all bloody irrelevant, as I fail to see what this has to do with my post.
KiNgBrAdLeY7: Writers are artists, too. And as per EVERY type of art, it draws HEAVILY, INSPIRATION, from life itself. (i am not talking of the phantasy elements here, but of the personalities of depicted characters). Those who consider these things bullshit, or offensive (and in case of offensive they must start wondering if they are socially blind/ignorant, braindead or simply living in their own delusional little world) what is their purpose, here, again? To play a game chopped up and censored (even indirectly and stealthily), just because they want to have the developers tailor it to their self-delusionary tantrums, by nagging?
So, what exactly is being drawn from real life in the Witcher? The fact that people have sex? In and of itself, that's great; the medium of gaming could certainly stand to be more comfortable with including sexual content, seeing as how it's a major part of human life and all that. The fact that men in the setting are horrible to women? It's unfortunate, but the writers and Sapkowski seem to have been working with a universe designed after old European civilization that spawned a number of the fairy tales that the Witcher (the books, mostly, and the game to an extent) are focused on, so having the society be rather horrible to women due to institutionalized misogyny is totally understandable; mind, aside from my general frustration that the Witcher shares the same need as most fantasy to be set in yet another patch of Tolkein's back garden, that argument doesn't really hold up that well when dealing with magic users, who are in the best position to buck the shittier aspects of society due to their power. Is it the fact that a lot of the women dress sexually? Not in and of itself, no. Is it that the female characters dress sexually, often with no discernible reason beyond titillation and in ways that make absolutely no sense for the more combat-exposed characters to wear? Sorry, I was too busy being distracted by Triss' plunging v-neck and body fishnets which in no way, shape, or form would provide any protection in combat; the answer is yes, incidentally. Is it that the game lets you sleep with the main female characters, in addition to a lot of random female characters? Not exactly. Is it that the game's providing a collectible card upon having sex with someone incentivizes a "gotta fuck 'em all" mindset, reducing the act of sex from a consensual shared physical and emotional exchange between partners down to a bedding someone for bragging rights, simultaneously reducing each female character in that moment to their role in the whole affair to a mere conquest? Hoo boy, you bet; I don't doubt for a moment that that kind of shit attitude about sex is inspired by real life, but it's one that had no place in that game except to simulate that same disgusting drive to think of sex itself as some sort of game where women are just points waiting to be scored. Is it that the writers had no problem redefining a character for the sole discernible purpose of making it ok to fuck them? See above, but long story short, YES.
But hey, maybe I'm being unreasonable. If that's the case, then please, feel free to explain to me how any of the rhetorical questions I answered with "yes" and explain why they aren't in fact offensive or meant to be a deliberate story of the art as inspired by real life as opposed to the background radiation from the developers' attitude toward sexuality seeping over into the writing.
KiNgBrAdLeY7: Also, every stinking game forum reeks of gays! In Baldur's Gate ones, i was harassed by one and the circumstances were exceptionally gross. In the Witcher forums, i wasn't harassed, but caught up in a shitstorm, while not a fault, and ultimately paid a price (temporary bans), while those responsible laughed, because some "hammer-wielding" people were their friends in real life. In all modern game forums, gays suddenly pop up and start DEMANDING (keyword here, DEMANDING!) homosexual features/depictions/choices implemented in them! The Witcher, Baldur's Gate, the recently cancelled World of Darkness MMO! Pc games are NOT gay bars, now, are they? Or i am missing something all along?
I said it before in the BG forums, and I'll say it here, the person who harassed you was out of line. However, as for your "shitstorm", I really have to wonder what exactly happened there; if it is anything like this little gem:
KiNgBrAdLeY7: I still hang between itching to puke and itching to start cutting heads, in real life. Damnit, they are everywhere! And on the aggressive! No one has a problem with decent people who keep their tastes and adventures private and confidential. But alas, as of late, homos are anything but...
Then I have an inkling that those temporary bans may have been deserved. But hey, for all I know, this time you didn't make any comments about hurting people due to their sexuality or throw slurs around, so please feel free to set the record straight.
As for people wanting more representation of gay people in gaming... can you blame them? Non-straight characters are extremely rare in games, and when they do they tend to be either horrible stereotypes or otherwise get the shaft of the writers. Trevor in Phantasmagoria 2 was entertaining, but even he was a little too close to the stereotypical idea of the mincing gay man at points, and his death only narrowly avoided (in my opinion) being an instance of the "fag in a fridge" trope by virtue of the whole plot of the game revolving around people getting picked off, whereas the fridge trope depends on killing someone off purely to motivate the main character. Baron von Glower from Gabriel Knight 2 was handled much better, but the writers could barely bring themselves to do anything other than hint at his sexuality in such a way that I didn't catch on that he was bisexual until someone spelled it out for me. Hell, Curtis Craig from Phantasmagoria 2 was the only instance I can recall of a playable established character who was not straight, and even he barely counted due to the game refusing to flat out refusing to decide if he was in fact bisexual or had something else going on (thankfully it was not the latter, but sadly it was something far, far stupider, as anyone who has played the game can guess).
The lack of representation is worse in RPGs, where the big selling point is being able to create and roleplay your character your way; not allowing for one's possible homosexuality or bisexuality while allowing for straight sexuality to be expressed in game only makes sense if the designers of the world are saying that gay people don't exist in the setting, which is all kinds of fucked; to the extent that the argument is that the setting is modeled after historical settings and that gay people weren't recognized back then, (1) that's incorrect (homosexuality was very much a thing throughout history; hell, the Romans didn't even give a shit about gender when it came to sex, instead defining sexual roles by roles analogous to today's concepts of "top" and "bottom"), and (2) to the extent that they were recognized and the fact that they weren't tolerated is supposed to be the justification, remember that in these settings it's not that homosexual characters aren't tolerated or are subject hate crimes, it's that the unoverse has decreed that they do not exist. Imagine an RPG universe where black characters get the shaft not by virtue of having to worry about the fantasy version of white supremacists, but by virtue of the game forcing them to play as a white guy because it has been decided that black people do not exist in this universe, and I think you can understand why some people might get irritated.
Geralt being straight I can get; he's a defined character who the writers have decided will act only in certain ways, much like JC Denton from Deus Ex and the like; making certain things non-canon for a defined character I get. When the game's main character is purely player defined, like BG or any given MMO, or the game only allows for an otherwise "defined" character to be a gay female character (because lesbians are hot and sell well, apparently) and not a gay male, then that's when things get headdesky real fast (looking at you, Mass Effect).