A highly-anticipated video game character has just been revealed to be gender-neutral

LGBTQ Entertainment News

Borderlands 3 character FL4K has been revealed to be non-binary.

As fans gear up for the highly-anticipated shooter game, it has emerged that one of its vault hunters does not fit into the gender binary.

Ahead of its September 13 release date, eagle-eyed fans have picked up on gender-neutral pronouns and allusions to an LGBT+ identity in the sequel’s description description.

“An emergent AI driven in an ongoing quest for self-discovery, FL4K wanders from world to world accompanied by beasts. While they feel a connection with the primal wisdom of animals, the social constructs of humans are strange to them,” reads one such passage.

Borderlands 3 fans debate FL4K’s gender identity

On the Gearbox Software forum, one fan shared a theory that the use of they/them pronouns are a simple reference to FL4K being a robot.

“I think what we’re actually seeing is a collective Artificial Intelligence, like Legion in Mass Effect,” they wrote.

“This is further enforced by non-binary just meaning that it uses quantum computing, instead.”

FL4k wears a pin in yellow, purple and black, the colours of the non-binary flag.
FL4k wears a pin in yellow, purple and black, the colours of the non-binary flag. (Gearbox Software)

Another fan argued that there is deeper meaning, writing: “Yes, it is that, but it is also a metaphor and an allegory to finding your true identity (that FL4K is in a journey of ‘self discovery’ is flat out stated in the style guide description), one that is very clearly meant to echo the experiences of non-binary and transgender people.”

“Gearbox is absolutely, without a shadow of a doubt making a comment on gender, only in a way that isn’t obvious or heavy handed.”

Others pointed out that the character wears a pin with binary 1s and 0s crossed out in the colours of the non binary pride flag.

Borderlands 3 writer confirms gender-neutral pronouns

Sam Winkler, Borderlands 3’s co-writer, confirmed that FL4K uses they/them pronouns, and that the decision was intentional.

“Maybe [it doesn’t matter] to you,” he wrote to a fan on Twitter. “But I hope you can imagine that it might to some.”

It is also a metaphor and an allegory to finding your true identity.

Winkler gave credit to non-binary fans and allies who campaigned for representation int he games.

“A whole bunch of people believed in it and worked to make it real,” he wrote.

Articles You May Like

Global Fashion Group posts NMV of $256.2 mn in Q1 FY24
‘Mickey vs. Winnie’ – The Public Domain Horror Trend May Have Just Jumped the Shark
Book review of The Internet of Animals by Martin Wikelski
Why Darren Criss Says He Is “Culturally Queer”
Glen Powell Explains What It Was Like Having ‘A Giant Jet Engine’ Blown In His Face While Shooting Twisters, And It Sounds Intense