X-gender: Difference between revisions

174 bytes added ,  2 years ago
→‎X-gender characters in fiction: Added Testament from Guilty Gear to X-gender characters in fiction.
(edited for clarity. moved pg that described historical practice from the etymology section (formerly definition) to the history section)
(→‎X-gender characters in fiction: Added Testament from Guilty Gear to X-gender characters in fiction.)
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'''Yuta "Yū" Asuka''' (飛鳥 悠, ''Asuka Yūta'') from the Tokyo Broadcasting System TV anime series Stars Align had a short arc that touched on how they were questioning their gender identity. During this they tell Maki that they want to be referred to with gender neutral language and that they think they are X-gender but don't want to be categorized.  
'''Yuta "Yū" Asuka''' (飛鳥 悠, ''Asuka Yūta'') from the Tokyo Broadcasting System TV anime series Stars Align had a short arc that touched on how they were questioning their gender identity. During this they tell Maki that they want to be referred to with gender neutral language and that they think they are X-gender but don't want to be categorized.  
'''Testament''' (テスタメント) from the Guilty Gear fighting game series is canonically ''musei'' (無性), neither male nor female, which is a category of X-gender.


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