So I said this before when I played warhammer 40k as a kid three decades ago I look at the depictions of imperial citizens and imperial guards and they were so fucking ugly. I just assumed Oh, yeah, tracks, these are humans are 38 thousand years removed from us, of course they look all weird, not to mention their hard oppressive lives with faces that look as if they seen a million sorrows, because of course they have, living in the grim darkness of the far future.
Then later on in life I went to England and saw common English people, not those on tv, but commoners collectively for the very first time and I was like, oh, I was wrong, British company Games Workshop just based the the imperial citizen on the English. That makes a lot more sense.
So don't think of them as not having zero femininity, they're just British.
Nobody has a problem with sisters of silence because women who don't talk are fine.
My complaint is that they have zero femininity.
So I said this before when I played warhammer 40k as a kid three decades ago I look at the depictions of imperial citizens and imperial guards and they were so fucking ugly. I just assumed Oh, yeah, tracks, these are humans are 38 thousand years removed from us, of course they look all weird, not to mention their hard oppressive lives with faces that look as if they seen a million sorrows, because of course they have, living in the grim darkness of the far future.
Then later on in life I went to England and saw common English people, not those on tv, but commoners collectively for the very first time and I was like, oh, I was wrong, British company Games Workshop just based the the imperial citizen on the English. That makes a lot more sense.
So don't think of them as not having zero femininity, they're just British.
Well fuck, TIL that Bri'ish "women" aren't very feminine lol
W40k has always been pretty non-sexual. Space marines and primarchs are assumed to have the libido of eunuchs.
Even all the Slaneesh excess descriptions tend to shy away from mentioning sexual extremes.
.... and you're looking for femininity.