Talk:Stevonnie/@comment-25679072-20150121203030

@Judgekoo

"Stevonnie looks more like a woman, actually.  Everyone assumed Stevonnie was a girl, this was because of exactly the way she looked. Let's face it, men and women are different, physiology is no exception. Humans have what we call sexual dimorphism, in which both genders show distinct morphological differences. Men are usually different from women because of a heavier build, broader shoulders, larger waist in comparison to their hips, and more. Women are also different in terms of having a smaller waist in comparison to their hips, a more slender physique, larger breasts, and more. " -Judgekoo

I get what you're saying with your arguement. But I still don't see any defining traits that stick Stevonnie as a straight up girl. Though you're not saying it outright, you're basically stating, that because Stevonnie looks more girly, it only has the possibility of being one.

If that is the case then this character for the Dangan Ronpa game is a man. But it isn't. Admittingly, I had confused the meaning of a trap character, but that one certainly is.

http://www.capsulecomputers.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/danganronpa-characters-10.jpg

But as I've said before: Stevonnie can either be looked at as a beautiful girl, or a very pretty long haired boy. In this case of very pretty boy, I'm talking about something like this:

http://media.tumblr.com/eb4e7a4b66ce34f2e776b2f633d6d2ac/tumblr_inline_mk2wzvZLen1qz4rgp.png

That is another Dangan Ronpa character who poses as a girl, but still makes my point (and is the only example that came to mind first). It seems like a girl, even dresses like one. But is a boy. Strip away the girly uniform, and you have a character you can't really tell the gender of, like Stevonnie here. I mean, sure Stevonnie has the one girl trait that is hips, and I won't even count hair, since cartoons in general have lots of long hair boy characters. But besides that, I really don't see the definite characteristic that labels Stevonnie as one particular gender. That is what I'm saying makes this character great.

As far as I'm concerned, Stevonnie as a character does its job by giving us a character that fits both Steven and Connie, personality and looks wise. If people think it's a boy, or a girl then no matter the case it does its job by letting us see it the way we do. I think if it looked completely like one gender, it would only make certain people uncomfortable anyway, with either Steven turning into a girl, or vice versa with Connie. Better this confusing debate worthy character than a definite "I think I know what gender it is without argument" kinda character.