Lesbian Pc Games

Lesbian Pc Games




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Lesbian Pc Games
"Grief isn’t a low. It’s a terrifying high, atop a mountain I never climbed."
Two cooks turn dream eaters when troubled, sleepless townsfolk seek their unusual services.
an angel summons a demon. they fall in love.
Inspired by stories like Dune, Star Trek and The Expanse.
Escape the bizarre pocket dimension of an obsessive serial killer in this comedic horror rpg maker game
a short love story about time and space
a tiny, hopeful story about trans wlw friendship and love
Alice, Alice, the Red Queen is missing. The queen has been dismembered and Alice must find all her pieces.
A girls' love kinetic novel. Erin randomly gets asked out on a date by a cute girl.
What’s a girl to do when she gets two visitors at midnight who both want her- and some blood?
It has been raining ceaselessly for 7 days...
Escape & find love in a group of urban explorers.
magical girl helps burnt out high school student graduate
Mermaids! Passions! 23 endings!! Help CiCi follow her dreams~
A tale about the princess who lost her colors and the forest witch who is determined to retrieve them back
Be gay, do crime, and go to therapy!
Eternal amour versus infernal armor in this yuri RPG!
your job is to hunt a dragon, but she is so cute?!
A gatekeeper of the elevator to the moon meets a girl without papers
Can you get the girl that everyone longs for? A yuri romance visual novel
What happens when you spill coffee all over a rich girl?
I'll bring you the rom sometime. You'd like it. Have you played the first two?
speak with a Mirror, learn your fate
A girls' love kinetic novel about two lonely women who meet by chance.
Trixie spends Snowmas with her friends. Lesbianism ensues.
give your girlfriend the best birthday gift ever
A slow, queer, post-war space opera
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Contains lesbian characters or themes dealing with lesbian identity.
Explore games tagged Lesbian on itch.io. Contains lesbian characters or themes dealing with lesbian identity. · Upload your games to itch.io to have them show up here.
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A choose your own adventure game in which you are free to choose your gender and orientation.

A visual novel with an incredible freedom of customisation - choose your character's gender, pronouns, appearance, clothing preferences, personality, and more. Currently only male romance interest.

A text-based adventure that allows the player to choose their gender and sexual orientation.

A text-based adventure in which the player can choose their gender identity, expression, pronouns, and both sexual and romantic orientation.

There are two male characters who were in a romantic relationship. Also features a gender-neutral character and mentions of other LGBTQ+ themes.

The male protagonist has both female and male romance options.

This game tells a story of a woman trying to deal with her wife's death.

Most of the characters in this game are gender-ambiguous, and use gender-neutral pronouns.

This game deals with themes of gender and sexual identity through the relationship between the protagonist and the best friend she's searching for.

A female protagonist with multiple female romance options.
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Games with LGBTQ+ themes and characters. Includes gay, lesbian, bi, homosexual, bisexual, pansexual, asexual, transgender, polyamorous, non-binary, and others.
A list of games that focus on gender issues, characters' identity, or allows the player to choose their own gender expression.
A list of games that focus on relationships between male characters, have an option of choosing a male character's sexuality, and/or explore sexuality from a masculine point of view.
A list of games that focus on relationships between women, have an option of choosing a female character's sexuality, and/or explore sexuality from a feminine point of view.
Games that let the player choose a gender, and allows them to romance characters of the same and/or another gender. Includes games that you can play both as a gay man and a gay woman.


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Video games with same-sex relationships are rare, but these 10 games put the LGBTQ community front and center.
The video game industry is slowly (perhaps too slowly) liberalising, moving to include more rounded female characters and protagonists, more variety with regards to relationship choices in RPGs (which is why the lack of an option to date Yusuke in Persona 5 was so heart-breaking), and better representation of the LGBTQ+ community in video games both AAA and indie. When compiling this list, I realised with a heavy heart that we still have a long way to go. Some of these are not as deep and representational as I’d like, but they are a start, and the existence of LGBTQ+ stories and characters in video games is only going to get better in the future.
The Assassin’s Creed series has moved more and more into RPG territory, and the latest entry went full Mass Effect with dialogue options, moral choices, and the option to bang anyone you like. You can play as a male or a female mercenary, and while embodying this character you are free to pursue any and all options with regards to sexual conquest, including the option to abstain from sex and romance completely. This is good, because it normalizes gay and lesbian relationships. It’s also shallow because most of these choices amount to lots and lots of sex and little else, reducing sexual representation to sex representation.
This short, two-hour experience is a walking simulator in which the player takes on the role of Katie, a girl who returns home to find her family house empty. As she explores the house, we piece together the lives of her parents and her sister. It’s an engaging and unconventional narrative structure which keeps the plot moving forward beautifully. The source of the rift which had led to the house being found empty is the outing of Katie’s sister as a lesbian who has fallen in love with a punk rocker named Lonnie. Learning about their relationship as the game goes on even uncovers links to the feminist punk movement of the ‘90s, Riot Grrrl. So that’s pretty cool.
The Last of Us did a lot of things right, including a true and nuanced depiction of grief, a multi-layered relationship which grows naturally and with room to breathe, and a depiction of a young lesbian character done right.
In the DLC to the main game, titled Left Behind , protagonist Ellie must explore and survive an abandoned shopping mall with her friend Riley, a story which ends with a parting kiss. From what we’ve seen so far of the game’s sequel, we also know that Ellie will play a starring role, and has been seen in the trailers dancing with, and kissing, a girl. Ellie is a strong-willed, resourceful, and ambitious character who also happens to be gay. She is a wonderful example of an LGBTQ character written well.
The first Life is Strange was well-received little darling, examining the relationship between two friends, Max and Chloe. While the relationship is platonic, the devs made the daring (read: not daring at all) move to experiment with their characters by giving them the option to kiss, and by handing out enough subtext to make us wonder about a potential more-than-friends-friendship. It was all a bit meh. The sequel (or prequel) on the other hand, fared better, introducing a friend to Chloe who makes no bones about liking girls. Chloe herself is also given the dialogue option early on to tell her friend Rachel that she has feelings for her. Throwing out vagueness for direct gayness in the second game was an absolute breath of fresh air.
Much like the afore-listed Assassin’s Creed , which mentioned the now-listed Mass Effect , Mass Effect is a game whose mechanics are geared around player choice. While there is a narrative, it can be influenced by choice, opening up new paths and options as you play (at least, to a certain point, and only until the trilogy’s ending which cast every choice aside like week-old milk). The non-narrative choice mechanic is that of relationships, which, to the developers’ credit, were given enough attention to become a very key aspect of many players’ experience. The devs did come under fire when they allowed female Shepard to be gay, but not male Shepard, and so they fixed it in the following game. The adage ‘better late than never’ is apt here, I suppose. Either way, by the time the third game is out, not only can relationships go whichever way you desire, you can also date whichever lizard-skinned alien takes your fancy. All is as it should be.
[For complete disclosure: Final Fantasy IX is this writer’s favorite game ever, and he fully embraces any excuse to mention this game]
Final Fantasy IX , claimed by series creator Hironobu Sakaguchi to be his personal favorite (his David Copperfield , if you will), is a complete JRPG experience, with a fantastic motley crew of protagonists that has no weak link. Every party member has something about them that makes them charming and intriguing, even series oddball Quina Quen. Quina is often seen as the comic relief character – the JarJar – of the game but Quina is more than that. Quina is a non-binary character from an enigmatic swamp-dwelling race of happy, peaceful, inquisitive, frog-eating people. Arguably it is frustrating that the one non-binary character in the franchise is an ugly fat thing that eats frogs and isn’t even human, but Quina also plants in the player’s mind the seed of an idea that there are more things in heaven and earth etc etc.
The game hailed by many today as the finest western RPG to have ever graced our consoles is also a game filled with characters to love and hate in equal measure; characters with intricately-woven relationships who make terrible mistakes, charm, trick, and steal from each other; characters who are remarkably human for all their magic. Fan favorite character, Ciri, is a badass woman who is introduced through flashbacks and stories told by people who have been charmed and impressed by her. When controlling Ciri later in the game, players are given the choice to declare, as Ciri, that she prefers the company of women. This is also proven canon in the fantasy books which inspired the game, as Ciri is involved in a relationship with a female character. Gay, bisexual, pansexual; whatever the case, Ciri is awesome.
A delightful life simulator which has a strong message for the capitalist world around us, Stardew Valley puts players in the shoes of a young woman or man who becomes disenfranchised by office life in the city and opts to take on a farm they have inherited in the countryside. So begins one of the most wonderful, relaxing gaming experiences in recent memory. Inspired heavily by Nintendo’s Harvest Moon franchise, Stardew Valley improves on its predecessor in many, many respects, one of which being the option to enter into a gay or lesbian relationship if you so choose. Adding in this option merely gives the player the added freedom to craft the exact life they would want to lead in this perfect rural landscape.
This game got a lot of hype at launch for being something very much its own. Not a life sim, not a walking sim, not something which fits into conventional genre types. Night in the Woods is a narratively-driven adventure story about a (cat) girl called Mae, 20 years old and a college dropout. Mae returns home and, through the game’s narrative, we learn more about her life, her friends and family, and her mental health. Before leaving for college, Mae played bass in a band and two of her bandmates, Gregg (a fox) and Angus (a bear) are a gay couple. This kind of normalized gay-relationship-as-part-of-a-band-of-friends being woven seamlessly into the story is something that should be seen, naturalistically, in a lot more games by now. But it’s not, and that’s what makes Night in the Woods special.
Primarily known for being an engaging and clever children’s cartoon, Steven Universe has also had its own RPG, Save the Light , which is surprisingly excellent as tie-in games go, and well worth the asking price.
In both the show and the game one of its most beloved protagonists is Garnet, a member of the Crystal Gems who is actually a fusion – a being comprised of two characters fused together (yes, like Gogeta). The two characters who form Garnet are Ruby and Sapphire, two non-binary gems who are so in love that they prefer to spend every day fused into one being then together-but-separate as two. Ruby, Sapphire, and Garnet are referred to by the pronouns ‘she/her’, and so their relationship is arguably lesbian, but the gems are also non-binary, thus expanding their representation even further in the LGBTQ community. The impact that this show has had, and the way that it champions the LGBTQ community with nothing but love and celebration is truly wonderful. Watch the show and play the game now.



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By


Taylor Clemons


published August 31, 2020

In recent years, players looking for PC games that explore LGBTQ+ themes or feature queer characters have a plethora of titles to choose from. The rise of Itch.io and Humble Bundle has given small, indie developers access to a wider audience than had ever been possible before. The critical and commercial success of more well-known titles that have queer narratives and characters has paved the way for developers to tell better, more intricate stories that more closely resemble the real-life issues facing the LGBTQ+ community. 
If you've been scrolling through Steam or your console's digital storefront and having trouble knowing which titles are worth your time, we'll be breaking down our top ten picks for the best games with queer characters and themes. So whether you prefer visual novels and dating sims, or are looking for more action-oriented titles, you'll find something worth adding to your library. 
Developer: DONTNOD | Publisher: Square Enix | Release Date: January 30, 2015 | Platform: PC, PS3, PS4, Xbox 360, Xbox One
The first episode of Life is Strange came out all the way back in 2015, and was developed by French company DONTNOD (which had previously worked on Capcom's Remember Me) and published by Square Enix. The game follows Maxine "Max" Caulfield and her best friend, Chloe Price, as Max discovers she can rewind time. The pair use this newfound power to investigate the disappearance of Chloe's friend, and one-time lover, Rachel Amber. As players continue to manipulate time, branching dialogue and narrative paths open up, giving players the opportunity to test out several outcomes before settling on a decision. 
As the story progresses, players have the choice to rebuild Max's friendship with Chloe, leading to a
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