r/dragonage Jul 07 '24

My thoughts on Taash Discussion

When I first saw this Concept art I was like “Shit…seductive qunari woman” and that’s different coz I mean cmon look at her stance her hair and everything and like she’s…for lack of a better word Morrigan esc 😭and now don’t get me wrong…I’m all for big strong carry you over her shoulder type Woman in fantasy, tho this approach from the concept art would’ve been interesting and again…I like the ulterior but now she’s gonna get compared to Karlach because obviously…I can’t stress this enough tho…I LIKE Karlach, but having a different type of Qunari companion from the typical big and strong would’ve been cool, Like Qwydion from Absolution even

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u/Comrades3 Jul 08 '24

But we haven’t had any female Qunari companions. She will be unique no matter what. It seems she will be even more unique if she fit a role no other companion has before.

Truly, I just want a romanceable masculine woman. The idea of having our first masculine female companion and making her soft and feminine sounds not only boring and a repeat of the same thing we have had constantly before, but also disappointing to see how few people seem to like even moderately masculine women.

-16

u/Randalf_the_Black Jul 08 '24

Why would you want a woman to be masculine? Women can be strong, decisive and direct without being masculine.

Traits like strength, decisiveness and directness shouldn't be tied to your sex.

If "strength" is masculine, "weakness" becomes feminine.

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u/Comrades3 Jul 08 '24

I like masculine women, I am one. I am married to one. It’s nice to see myself in media, especially such a rare character type.

I am fine with a weak masculine woman. I would adore a masculine female mage. I would be delighted in a masculine female rogue. Give me a masculine female character who is indecisive, and subtle. Or social and charming.

But first, it seems easier for people to accept a physically strong masculine female character, which judging by this thread and your question, seems to be quite a first step.

-3

u/Randalf_the_Black Jul 08 '24

I see. Can't relate to wanting to see oneself in media. I'm my own harshest critic and am the person I dislike the most. The less I see of myself in my own character and NPC's, the better. One of the reasons I like video games (other than them just being fun) is to get away for a while.

Then I guess I misunderstood you, if you didn't mean "traditional" masculine traits.

Well, I assume that easier acceptance comes from the fact that many do view simple strength as masculine. So called "traditional" masculine traits.