I am not sure which part of Asia that is. I don't have any preferences for skin color.
Supposedly, Justice Bao was thought to be cursed and abandoned by his father when young because of dark skin but was then picked up and raised by another family member. He then proceed to become some legendary judge figure.
Then there is also all the western discrimination. If anything, I think there are more discrimination towards lighter skin color because we are all fairly dark skinned compared to westerners, and we already have black hair. (The chinese for one calls westerners ang mo kow or gweilo, which is basically red-haired monkeys/ghost man. It is now a neutral term but it used to be derogatory especially when the term was first coined.)
This feels more like a subtle dig at the westerner's discrimination towards darker skin color.
Though the skin color discrimination in this case is more magic power discrimination. The dark skin is like the sign of the "Dark Lord Destroy the World Muahaha"'s blessings and any references to racism is purely coincidental.
@Yatsuki It gets worse because both of them are delusional reincarnators although our cute Claudia isn't that delusional compared to the "otome MC"
It's more like Claudia is being conditioned to beleive that she will have the Bed End because almost everyone is a PoS, besides brother(s) and the royal family
@KingMab kudos on that one i didnt get it till i read @nep 's comment, I know I am just generalizing and using one or 2 examples but some people from east asia can be extremely rude to people that have darker skin colour than they have, I'm not saying they are racists because people might perceive ill will on their behaviour, but just being ignorant I guess... (quote that famous washing machine commercial as example)
Now inside the novel the general behaviour is to some extent completely reasonable if you live in the middle ages, have practically no connections to people of other ethnic groups and the country was basically nuked because of idiots and missinformation, bias everywhere