Power Uploader
- Joined
- Nov 4, 2018
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Fictional futanaris don't have a genetic disorder. They're just a fictional "third gender", as in that they have functional full sets of both genitalia. Intersex people do exist, but they're not "futanaris". They have rare genetic disorders that have various forms and they often have a hard life. Comparing them to this manga is doing them a disservice.Several forms of intersexuality create people who look like futas. Klinefelter for example, male genitalia and female breast growth. Certain forms of Androgen defiency also cause children to look entirely female with the penis essentially growing during puberty. Not identical to how futas are in fiction, but that body type kind of exists.
Anyway, the characters here are not futanaris, nor intersex, so the point is moot.
It's just a case of "waking up as a girl/guy". The prevalence doesn't seem that rare and doesn't seem to have any adverse consequences on the body. They just become the other gender completely. At a genetic level too. And it's irreversible.
It doesn't really compare with actual (real) transgender people who voluntarily chose surgery so their body, on the surface level (not genetic), conforms with their internalized gender.
And we can see that this world has both type. Those who change spontaneously, without wanting to (consciously?) and those who change because they chose to. I guess those who have surgery would be jealous of the ones who changed completely without having to do anything.
I don't know what the author wants to explore here. Maybe just "what happens when you suddenly change sex?" without digging more than that into actual transgenders specific problems.