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This is a list of fictional non-binary characters (i.e. genderqueer) identified as such in anime, animation, print media, feature films, live-action television, theatre, video games, webcomics, and other mediums.
This list of fictional snakes is subsidiary to the list of fictional animals and is a collection of various notable serpentine characters that appear in various works of fiction. It is limited to well-referenced examples of snakes in literature , music , film , television , comics , animation and video games .
This is a list of pansexual characters in fiction, i.e. characters that identify as pansexual or are identified by outside parties to be pansexual. Pansexuality is the sexual , romantic or emotional attraction towards people regardless of their biological sex or gender identity .
One of the first prominent instances of a non-binary person being represented in popular media was the 2014 short film Break Free, created by Ruby Rose. [citation needed] As of 2023, the video had garnered over 54 million views. [37] [38] Another very significant representation of a non-binary individual was Raine Whispers in Disney's The Owl ...
The actor appeared in the 2016 comedy sequel as a character named All, a non-binary fashion model. LGBT+ activists led a boycott of the film, with a petition amassing up to 25,000 signatures.
The Dragon Prince and Gen:Lock both feature non-binary characters. In the first show, Kazi in The Dragon Prince, the Sunfire Elf sign language interpreter, goes by they/them pronouns. [52] [53] Val/entina is genderfluid. [54] [better source needed] In literature, a few examples that stand out. The novel On Steel Breeze featured a non-binary ...
Non-binary is a word for people who fall “outside the categories of man and woman,” according to the LGBTQ+ advocacy group GLAAD. Because binary means “two,” if someone doesn’t identify ...
The game has non-binary, gay, pansexual, and straight characters, which Danny Homan, senior writer at the game's developer, Gearbox Software, said that since their goal is "entertain the world," their characters should reflect that world, with writers trying to be aware and respectful of people of all backgrounds. [99]