Oh yeah, gods forbid someone try to limit what kinds of stories can be toldYou wanting to put tags onto something that is not there is extremely annoying because it tries to limit what a story wants to convey with a simple tag.
It's not ambiguous though. The only thing ambiguous is whether or not the author is sincere about the very blatant and undeniable transness of the protagonist. Well, that and the transphobic readers who wish to deny trans existence who twist themselves into knots to try to explain why this character couldn't possibly be trans.Could this be a title concerning a trans character? Maybe, maybe not. So far I think it's just ambiguous enough that it could be read either direction based on the dialogue presented, and only time and actual progression and development of the plot and the protagonist character will tell if one is the case over the other or if there's some unseen potential third option that I don't want to discount the notion of out of ignorance.
If that's where the author goes, then that's what is being presented.It's not ambiguous though. The only thing ambiguous is whether or not the author is sincere about the very blatant and undeniable transness of the protagonist. Well, that and the transphobic readers who wish to deny trans existence who twist themselves into knots to try to explain why this character couldn't possibly be trans.
16
Looks fuckin 30
The thing you need to understand is that what the author intends doesn't actually matter.If that's where the author goes, then that's what is being presented.
That's my whole stance.
I'm not here to deny the reality of transfolk, in reality or in fiction. I'd just prefer to not put words in the author's mouth and let them speak through the story.
But I do try to let the author dictate the story they wish to tell, and not put my own interpretations on their narrative, however justified I may feel they are, until they're backed in no uncertain terms by the individual who is actually putting pen to paper.
And at present, there's an argument that the reason the protagonist is stressed over discovering they possess a penis is because of what canonically happens to men found on-campus within the story of the game the protagonist is currently existing within - and not explicitly because of dysphoria.
Would it be great if this was a trans protagonist realizing their dreams by being Isekai'd into the setting of their favorite escapist fantasy from their old life? Abso-fucking-lutely, I'd be overjoyed to see something like that represented in contemporary manga in a way that's unequivocal in its presentation.
And sure, it could be interpreted that way, and I'd argue convincingly so, but I'd prefer to not make that final call for the protagonist or the artist until it's stated as such by them - because it's really not my place to do so, even for a fictional character.
Glad you've figured out your situation for yourself.
You also don't speak for every human being and their individual experiences and existences.
Acting like you're qualified to do so, is where you're going wrong. You're entitled to your personal perspective and what it means to you as an individual, but pretending that because you've figured your singular life out that anyone who experiences and feels differently is delusional, is as laughable as it is absurd.
You don't know the lived experience of anyone but yourself. You can't. Pretending otherwise is a fool's errand and makes you look like a child.
The scientific term for that is himedanshiyuri-danshi (man consuming yuri)
Yuri-danshi is indeed the name of a manga but himedanshi is the more common term for such men.Thought it was yuri-danshi since it plays off fudanshi.
Especially since there is a manga titled 'Yuri danshi', which has the synopsis describe the term as 'straight male reader of girls'-love manga'.