I don't know if I posted it in this homophobe's thread or another one, but I had totally forgot Ana was gay until today. I didn't read the comic until today and I don't see what the big deal is. If people are really that truly concerned about the way the love story was written then there is a whole lot more to be complaining about writing wise.
Why does it matter so much that her being gay is the focus of the comic book? Zavala could have had a comic book about him giving birth to thralls and most of these people complaining wouldn't have batted an eye. Instead they use made up subjective terms like "forced diversity" to mask the fact that they didn't want to see two girls kissing. The worst part is they act like its some kind of liberal conspiracy trying to force the gayness upon the country. Its small minded and blatantly obvious what these people think the real problem is.
English
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Edited by GenXer: 7/13/2018 2:43:02 PM"they use made up subjective terms like 'forced diversity' to mask the fact that they didn't want to see two girls kissing. The worst part is they act like its some kind of liberal conspiracy trying to force the gayness upon the country. Its small minded and blatantly obvious what these people think the real problem is." BAM! Spot on.
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Very well stated.
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Edited by FilthySimper: 7/13/2018 2:38:33 PMWhat the OP is referring to is there’s so much else that Ana could bring to the table, twilight gap, her powerful light, her discovery of the bray family, but all they focus on is the search for Rasputin which is still intertwined with her relationship. The problem isn’t the relationship itself, it’s the lack of everything else.
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The comic only talks about anything to do with Rasputin because it went with the warmind DLC. Bungie had to make tie together.