
I was worried about being able to fit in with humans, but in Tokyo, there are various races living together—Chinese, Americans, and orcs. There are also barbaric kin here who are after my life, but there are no knights. No one cares that I am an orc.
There was a TRPG with this kind of setting.
But is it that only certain skin colors are oppressed…?
>>2
Wow
>>2
Do Japanese people discriminate based on skin color?
I think there is discrimination based on body structure.
Is it the demon city Shinjuku?
That’s good, isn’t it?
Even if a Japanese person has some Oak face mixed in, it doesn’t feel that out of place.
I guess you didn’t like your own family either.
A short, big-breasted female police officer dark elf is going to squeeze me…
I saw it in Shadowrun.
>>11
Shadowrun has a pattern where humans suddenly become demi-humans, so discrimination and even worse things seem likely to happen.
In Japan, there’s only a recognition that regardless of being white or black, they are foreigners.
It might just be that it’s an oak regardless of whether it mixes with others.
If you want to fit in, that’s fine with me no matter what.
Well, in Japan, it might not be “That filthy demi-human bastard! Throw a stone at him!”
Nagoya?
>>15
I’m saying it’s Tokyo.
As long as you follow the local rules, I’m really okay with however many people there are…
They’re demonstrating to drive the orcs out from the elves in Japan…
As long as you can live a normal life without acting out, then I guess anything is fine…
I might be seen as having an amazing cosplay.
Recently, orcs are often depicted with somewhat poor nose shapes, but other than that, they are often portrayed with well-proportioned faces.
If you can speak Japanese to some extent, that’s fine.
I might look three times, but I hope that’s something you can forgive.
If they make a big noise, I might frown, but as long as they keep it quiet, I probably won’t pay any mind…
If you can live by following the law and manners, then it’s fine.
The Japanese principle of avoiding conflict might be a comfort for humanoid monsters who want to live peacefully.
Please follow local norms and pay your taxes properly…
Don’t discriminate only against orcs; they are orc people, not less than humans.
>>28
Pig man
>>28
If it is not biologically human, then it is rather strange to call it a person…
If it’s someone who doesn’t make noise at midnight and can stick to separating the trash, then I don’t care who it is anymore…
>>29
There are a lot of guys who can’t protect that, huh…
The signs indicating that someone is really done with you are subtle, so it’s often believed that Japanese people suddenly start to reject others.
Be careful about your diet.
If it’s a restaurant, as long as you’re eating quietly, it doesn’t matter how many people are there.
Isn’t it rather the case overseas?
>>34
The stores you can visit are different depending on the color…
Where does biological humanity begin and end?
(That foreigner looks like they have bad organs…)
Drawing orcs as they appear is discrimination, right?
No matter what your appearance is, if you say “Excuse me, I’ll take number 238 at the convenience store,” I will forgive you.
If you’re well-behaved in various ways, then I have no intention of interfering.
In reality, everyone is scared, but they just endure and interact normally because they don’t know what will happen.
>>40
Even if it looks scary, if nothing actually happens, then that’s fine, I guess…
Japanese people are generally not good at dealing with foreigners as a whole.
I think it’s a rather vague feeling.
I think of everyone as an outsider without distinction.
As long as you dress appropriately, follow the rules, and aren’t violent, anyone is fine, right?
If anything, even Japanese people who don’t know well can be scary.
Elves are discriminated against because they engage in extreme environmental activism.
>>48
I wonder where the template of elves being troublesome and orcs being serious and pathetic comes from.
>>49
Orcs are discriminated against because they are always involved in violence and rape.
I think that, regardless of orcs, elves who are troublesome have been that way from quite an early stage.
A branch is like a finger.
I think there are quite a few people who directly discriminate against others simply because they are just passing by strangers.