

Yogarwa and TheDannyGuy belong to a small but growing community of Indians - mostly photographers, art aficionados and models - who are trying to normalise nudity through art, albeit discreetly. The photographers, who usually capture slithering snakes and bustling beehives, were attending a ‘nude art’ workshop conducted by a photographer who calls himself ‘TheDannyGuy’ and a nude model and yoga instructor who goes by the name ‘Yogarwa’. Here, they spent six hours trying to capture the contours of two naked women striking various poses based on their polite requests. A motley group of five nature and wildlife photographers ‘worked’ inside a studio in Bengaluru rather than outdoors this Tuesday. That combined with MD being relatively niche compared to Genshin I really don't think MD would be effected by this at all.Ranveer Singh’s bum-baring shoot may have caused a stir but a bunch of artists is quietly trying to normalise nudity through their pictures. In your face for moment to moment gameplay than Genshin. Muse dash might be a bit playful with ecchi stuff but it's far less.

But considering they didn't remove any of the references to Hololive when the government asked them to ban Hololive I don't really see that happening either. Considering that we already have the ability to swap between two different looks with one character in game that's likely how they would do it for China but just remove the option for the old looks for them but allow us to swap.Īrtwork wise Theyed at best just be absent from the CN version. Hypothetically if MD had to deal with this it would also be locked just to China. West and Europe will still have the original designs and outfits with the "redesigned" outfits available to get in case people elsewhere want them. The "censorship" for Genshin only applies to the Chinese servers. Things like 'sexual content' don't have clear guidlines as to what is acceptable. It's got no clear boundaries, is bizarrely strict, yet gets barely enforced soon after. I called it 'lazy', but it might not be the most accurate word to describe it. There are many cartoons that are similar in this aspect but were never banned.Ĭensorship in China is……weird. The reason was that the characters had unnatural colored hair, wore fancy unnatural outfits, and so apparently encouraged chilren to do inappropriate things like dyeing their hair.

A famous example is a cartoon called 菲梦少女2, it got banned because it got reported. Reporting has a bigger effect than it should in China. (Glory of Kings' Diaochan, Honkai 3rd's Blood Rose etc.) There are no news regarding censoring any other characters besides the genshin ones.
#A muse nudity skin
There are also characters from more popular and/or older mobile games who expose much more skin around sexualised parts. But the censorship took place half a year later, and mhy clearly did not have enough time to act on it, since they only tweaked the outfits then announced that better designs are coming soon. Government was aware of the game and its content, since they allowed the game to be included in a national business support program which was annouced last July. The 4 censored genshin characters have been present in game since the start, and the game itself has been popular for quite a long time before the sudden censorship. Then I tried to figure out why I thought that way, and I remembered some stuff. I do see your point……in fact I agreed with you while reading your reply.
#A muse nudity cracked
If ccp is really as lazy as you're implying then that really only means thst other games haven't been cracked down on yet because they're not popular like Genshin is. The fact that you blamed a rights activist group for the change pretty much shows that you're not happy with it. That would be like saying China supports the millions of bots that infect gaming scenes just because they haven't prevented botting from happening in their country. Other worse examples doesn't really support your argument either. How lewd something is or isn't is just your personal opinion and not that of the government. If you really are aware of China culturally (as you're implying,) you'd be very aware of how heavy China goes with censorship in just about everything. I'm fully aware of what you're attempting to say and I don't agree with blaming an active rights group is even remotely close to why the change happened.
