Of course we get more complaining.
"This is where the infamous drow race is introduced, where I guess they were just… evil women of color.
Unfortunate. We decided to make them purple-skinned like they are in more modern lore. "
Because...women of color can't be villains? Okay, I'm not saying to accept everything you receive as good representation, but if you want it OVERALL, you're going to
get it. Meaning, you will have a variety of characters. Not just the generic "safe" token versions of them. Villains, Heroes, Anti-Heroes, Mentors, you name it. To act like people can NEVER make these characters a certain troupe because of previous horrible depictions is absurd. You don't have to like it, but again, this is what you get when you tell people to make their own works. You have no control over that.
"Just gotta say that it’s a huge pet peeve of mine when (usually male) writers write a matriarchal society as, air quotes, “sexually liberated,” otherwise known as “an excuse to draw them in lingerie because I can’t imagine women’s bodies not catering to me personally in any scenario, while still drawing men in full body armor.” Thanks for coming to my TED talk."
The same thing happens with women too. Especially with romance novels. How many romance novels/rom-coms are shirtless men whisking away a pretty woman? How many women write erotica/snuff about some big, handsome guy who's basically a perfect Adonis sweeping them off their feet?
A lot. You can go to a general store and I guarantee you the women's section is filled with women authors/artists who draw and write the same exact thing.
Both men and women engage in power fantasies. There's nothing inherently wrong with that. Wanting to feel empowered is why these fictional works exist. Different audiences will respond to other power fantasies depending on their own tastes. Furthermore, going into another power fantasy you don't like and calling it problematic is of course going to be stupid because it's not geared towards your interests. I guarantee you plenty of women would not like it if men went into their hobby, called it problematic, and turned every Adonis on those covers into generic guys.
"Speaking of which, boy was she hard to fix without just throwing everything away and starting over! First of all, the way she sits on the throne seems like a product of an alien who never experienced what a chair is… which might also explain the throne’s uncomfortable-looking design. I actually ended up giving it a bigger seat and more lumbar support."
Okay, a bit of art sperging here, but the example while a little wonky still makes sense for the perspective and is clearly a product of personal taste. Not everything has to be drawn 100% realistically. It just has to make sense. It's really not an awkward pose. Most people could do it on a high enough chair. I agree the chair itself is a little wonky (mostly because several characters cover it up) but it's not the worst post. That and the new lumbar is rather unnecessary.