>>725192595
>What women do with their own bodies is none of your business.
Correct, but in video games we're not objectifying real women, we're objectifying fictional women. Sounds like real women are just jealous of the fictional women.

Also, what is the defining boundary between "objectification" and "sexual expression"? Does the fictional female character have to be designed by a woman to count as expression? Or do we give hypothetical agency to the fictional character? Is a character like Lara Croft being objectified or is she expressing her sexuality?