I hate that the 2010s marked the return of puritan sentiments to western culture. It seemed like maybe we were finally heading in a direction where female sexuality wasn't considered threatening and that there'd be less shaming of both attractiveness and appreciation for said attractiveness, but here we are.
It's further baffling that Metal Gear is ever brought up in these conversations. It's a series that features characters that might as well be greek statues come to life and is never afraid to show them off or even focus on them, but the second someone has breasts everyone loses their minds. I just can't comprehend the contempt for feminine form that always seems to emerge.
What you're describing sounds more like objectification. "Female sexuality", at least to me, implies that women are active participants who know what they want and like. They aren't just there to look pretty and accept male attention.
All software is a licensing agreement with 99.9% of rights held by the provider of the license. How in 2015 people still don't understand this concept is baffling. You have never whole heartily purchased software in your life, unless you have purchased source code and licensing rights.
MS, Sony, Steam can cancel you online account with all your "purchases" whenever they see fit. Usually this is most common when your account is identified as attempting to modify the service, penetrate security, or work around predefined restrictions.
Modifying core game files like .exe's in Steam is an offense, with all licensing agreements rendered void. Now they don't enforce this rule diligently but it leaves the door open for them to close accounts when they see fit for the smallest infractions.
Instead of bitching, why not put your vote, and money where your mouth is.
OK but companies have to make sure customers are happy, and if people perceive something as crossing a line, even if it's covered in the EULA, there's gonna be backlash. It generally isn't in their best interest to piss off paying customers. I think people are happy as long as they have the illusion that they own something, even if they technically don't.
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