BG3 is that renaissance, it's that necessary push to display sexuality fully and unbashfully. And like Mortal Kombat, there's bound to be resistance to exploring those areas. But 10 years from now, we'll be looking at BG3 as one of the games that help normalize sexuality in games, and Larian deserves a round of applause for that.
This is my feeling, too. I love that — and most of the scenes are very modestly cut.
Originally Posted by rodeolifant
Well, D&D has entire books focused on scary monsters, rules for brutal combat, graphic descriptions of burning your enemies and so forth. Not once did I read a D&D book titled '50 shades of vampire' .
There *is* the Book of Erotic Fantasy. Which is basically photos of cosplayers in various stages of undress with custom classes focused on intimacy and supporting materials how to run campaigns with an erotic theme.
But that said: the Lae’zel romance starts with sex and goes deeply into appreciating life and your significant other — with the only recurrent intimate part being kisses.
Shadowheart is laid back about sex — but doesn’t just lie down with you. When you’re sitting near the waterfall, sipping wine and watching the sky, there may be sex after the fade out, or there may be not.
This is presented expertly, so maybe focus on that and not on the sex scenes found when intentionally following the edgy path?