if you get anything wrong you either still sound masc or you sound like a cartoon character. nevertheless, when done right, people have gotten some pretty amazing results.
and... it's fun. I like playing around with my voice. so I'll probably keep banging my head against it for a little while longer. even if I don't get the voice I want I'm sure I'll learn something interesting
and then once you've got that down, you have to spend time tuning each one to find a voice that actually works and sounds good and is comfortable
I found this pinknews article which claims Frisk from Undertale is confirmed non-binary, but in the cited interview Toby Fox actually just straight up refuses to answer the question. which is... the opposite of a confirmation
wtf?
(if you know an actual source, lmk)
https://web.archive.org/web/20190108081443/http://outermode.com/interview-toby-fox-undertale
I think the biggest thing I wish people understood about accessibility is that the best way to make something accessible is often to offer more choice. Conflicting access needs will always be a thing, but they're a lot easier to deal with if there are multiple alternative ways to accomplish something. For instance, giving your users a choice of fonts rather than deciding one is universally "more accessible"
Mulan (2020) (spoilers)
witch lady shows up again to try and turn Mulan to the dark side
"no. my duty is to the emperor"
why tho? you were just kicked out of your battalion in disgrace
Mulan (2020) (spoilers)
Mulan hiding her identity is "poisoning her chi", making her weaker
can i be real a second? / for just a millisecond? / let down my guard and tell the people how i feel a second?
β formerly of witches.town β feels β introverted, kinky, geeky, shy, catperson πΈ β they/them β gender is a hoax β
it's ok to fav or reply to old toots