Viewer Gender Confusion/Video Games

"Serra: B-But... to be a monk, don't you have to... be a... well... a guy? Lucius: Yes. Yes, you do."
 * Slippy Toad in Star Fox 64.
 * Parodied in one VG Cats comic, where Leo and Aeris try to see which bathroom Slippy uses. Doesn't work. "It's peeing in the fucking break room!"
 * However, in the original game, as well as Star Fox Assault, Slippy has a male voice. It's only the N64 title where the confusion happens.
 * This has happened to Tails from Sonic the Hedgehog a few times, even though in the first games in which he speaks, he was actually voiced by a boy.
 * It's All There in the Manual, of course, since his given name is the unambiguously male Miles Prower.
 * Doesn't help any that in the spanish word for "tail" is feminine. And this hit the dub like a bolide hit Earth 65 million years ago.
 * A large portion of this is due to the Urban Legend that Tails was originally designed as a girl but was changed at the last minute. Said legend is prevalent both in Japan and the US, leading to double the confusion. Whether or not it's true has yet to be proven, but most informed fans believe it quite false.
 * If you research his design process, you find that the two-tailed fox design was always male, and that Sonic was always intended to have a sidekick the same gender as him.
 * It REALLY doesn't help that Tails' looks on the title card of Sonic the Hedgehog 2 looks really, really feminine.
 * Nor does it help that Tails is currently voiced by a girl.
 * Due to his dreadlocks, Knuckles is often mistaken for a girl.
 * Due to no voices, prepubescence, hair clips, and small graphics, some viewers originally thought Pat from Mega Man Star Force was a girl. The Japanese names for the character, Tsukasa and Hikaru, are both androgynous names at best. In addition, while "Tsukasa" is usually written in kanji for boys and hiragana for girls, Tsukasa Futaba Took a Third Option and writes his name in katakana. English names "Pat" and "Rey" attempt to keep this impression (or lack of it). You'd almost think it was deliberate...
 * Not to mention that the first time fans got a look at him was during the opening of the anime, where his hair was incorrectly colored blond. Needless to say, it didn't help.
 * Zero in Mega Man X comes equipped with long hair and, well, there's no other way to say it -- booblights, causing some confusion until Mega Man X4 added his ridiculously manly voice, and ironically enough X's ridiculously girly voice.
 * Zero was always intended to be male. That bit of female!Zero art drawn as a joke just as R20 was about to be released in Japan didn't help matters.
 * Even worse was Harpuia in the Mega Man Zero series: a bishonen named after a always-female monster with a soprano voice in the first game. Later games pitched it down an octave or two.
 * And then there's Cubit Foxtar, which the Complete Works states as male (an oblique reference to kitsune, well, pretending to be women), and Polar Kamrous, who has a gruff voice to match her (this time the story stated it explicitly) build, from Zero 3 and Zero 2, respectively.
 * The first images of the "enemy Rockmen" in ZX Advent showed them in armored form, leading many to believe that Atlas (Model F) was a man and Tethys (Model L) was a girl; the names didn't help (Atlas was a Titan, Tethys a Titaness in mythology), and neither did the fact that they were boss-Expies of Fefnir and Leviathan, also a man and woman, respectively. When the unarmored pictures and gameplay videos came out, Atlas had a visible bust and Tethys sounded like a boy, albeit young. They rapidly became known as "Trap" and "Reverse Trap" in the fanbase. The dub makes Tethys sound older and more boy-like, at least.
 * In the original ZX, if you never hear Hurricaunce's voice, you could think she's a guy.
 * Serenade from the Mega Man Battle Network series, one of the strongest Navis in the world. His gender was changed for the US version and kept vague for several years in Japan, leading to a lot of heated debate. Finally a profile book was released where his profile stated he was "a male Net Navi with the appearance of a young girl".
 * But the worst is probably Lumine from Mega Man X8. Very female voice, long light-purple hair, thin feminine body, yet other characters always refer to him as a "he".
 * Similarly for Optic Sunflower, he has a very feminine voice, but is referred to as male in-game.
 * Yoshi in Super Mario Bros. -- "she" laid eggs for crying out loud. It really doesn't help that "Yoshi" is used to refer to either one individual or his entire species.
 * Fan Wank often involves thinking of the "eggs" as more like poop, given the method of their production. Apparently Yoshis learned their combat techniques from monkeys.
 * Word of God says male Yoshis lay exploding eggs used for combat, females lay actual eggs, and the Yoshi usually seen with Mario and friends is in fact male.
 * Conflicting evidence comes from Japanese text from a Super Smash Bros. trophy, claiming that Yoshis all have no gender.
 * Watt, the living spark in Paper Mario, has no obvious gender identifiers. The text usually uses feminine pronouns for Watt, but switches to male in at least one place.
 * Link is not a stranger to this trope, thanks to being the main character in a game called Zelda and people occasionally mistaking his tunic for a skirt. It doesn't help that he tends to be really pretty...
 * Sheik is definitely a contender for King/Queen of this trope. Word of God has it s/he's female, but would you know that on your first playthrough of Ocarina of Time, what with the Nintendo 64's limited graphical horsepower? S/he single-handedly divided the entire Zelda fanbase on the issue of her gender, and continues to do so today. Of course, this one is interesting because Sheik is actually the (quite obviously female) Zelda- the real issue is "is she disguised as a man, or does she transform into a man?" The manga said she transformed (more like brainwashed, if you pay attention), while Smash Bros manual said it was just a disguise. What version counts as Word of God depends on who you ask.
 * It really does not help that Ruto actually calls Sheik a man at one point, or that Sheik's concept art looks pretty masculine...
 * Due to the artstyle making no body-built differences between male and female characters, quite a few players also thought Tetra, (who's basically Sheik's The Wind Waker counterpart, minus the mysteriousness) was a boy, right until Link's little sister Aryll exclaimed "How terrible! The girl fell into the forest!!". Tetra is the only one in the game who suffers from this, since she's the only female character who is wearing pants.
 * The guards found in the N64 Zelda games are a strange case: the official art makes it easy to tell, but the actual in game model, due to graphical limitations, has a slender build with what appears to be a pronounced bustline, lipstick, and tight short pants.
 * There's a double example in Twilight Princess with the shaman Renado and his daughter Luda. Because of his robe and her cowboy-like outfit, they could be easily seen as mother and son.
 * One Game Informer preview of Skyward Sword described Demon Lord Ghirahim as "a skinny, ghostly female".
 * The mandatory Final Fantasy examples
 * Most protagonists all the way back to Cecil from the fourth game, who, upon armor removal, had long flowing hair and a tiara. Furthermore, he's got black lipstick in his concept art. Not to mention a fair few of the antagonists, until the tentacles and spikes and roots come out.
 * Speaking of Cecil, in Nintendo DS remake of his Final Fantasy IV game, he is given light blue armor and a blue hairband. He's still got the lipstick in the CGI, though. The voiceacting kinda helps, as well.
 * It's actually Lampshaded in Troia, when a drunken pub-goer mistakes him for a prostitute.
 * Minwu from Final Fantasy II is frequently thought to be female, despite being called a man when he is introduced, the robes, veil and powerful healing abilities are major reasons why.
 * Kuja from Final Fantasy IX, anyone? The pic up here truly speaks for itself. He even has feminine hips and waist, which arguably falls into "cheating." The only thing keeping him from being a woman, visually, is that we can't see the boobs or junk.
 * This is lampshaded when
 * And lampshaded again in Dissidia Final Fantasy where Penelo gives her descriptions of all the characters and claims that she dislikes Kuja since no boy should look prettier than she does.
 * The fact that his art by Yoshitaka Amano makes him look like he's wearing black lipstick and Mascara (But then again though, that's one of his art trends) doesn't help either. Surprisingly enough; Nomura actually made him look MORE masculine for Dissidia.
 * For that matter, at least one FFIX player mistook Zidane for a girl. But considering that
 * NO mention of Quina? Quina actually is always referred to as "S/he".
 * Chances are that 75% of the people who have played Final Fantasy XII have mistaken Larsa for a girl. Alas he is a boy. A very girly boy. With very pretty shoes. A very twelve year-old boy.
 * Sorceress Adel from Final Fantasy VIII, obviously. Despite being a sorceress, the first reaction is generally "That's a man," due to her tattoos and overall masculine appearance.
 * Ramza from Final Fantasy Tactics.
 * Interestingly enough for the dorks in the crowd, Ramza's technically androgynous when it comes to the game's statistics system: He gets physical growth like a man and magical growth like a woman.
 * Although in the Enhanced Remake, he sounds masculine.
 * Many fans of Final Fantasy Tactics Advance thought that Marche looks like a female, with his near-feminine hair and shy personality. Luckily, when the bullies teased Marche for being "quiet like a little girl", Ritz's response made the fact that Marche is indeed a boy.
 * It doesn't help that Marche's hair actually looks just like Ramza's.
 * And after so many Bishonen protagonits through the series, while they weren't many, there were some that originally thought Lightning was yet another girly male protagonist!
 * Crisis Core: Genesis is a man, however much the picture might fool you.
 * In the SaGa game Final Fantasy Legend III, a boss named Mayteria is referred to as "he" but take one look at the sprite and you'd bet that "he" looks like a "She"! S/he could easily' pass for Cleopatra.
 * Zelos in Tales of Symphonia upon first glance when you see him on the cover of the game... and sometimes second and third glances too. Once you meet him in the story and figure out he's a male-voiced Handsome Lech, you might be in shock for three more hours of gameplay. It probably also doesn't help that Zelos wears pink, and in the west, that's considered a feminine colour. (The Rapunzel Hair, too.)
 * Don't forget Corrine. Girly voice and name, cute and cuddly ball of fluff, multi-colored, Corrine's gotta be a girl, right? Nope. The little fox is a male. However, Corrine can also go into an even bigger gender debate when you take in two factors, the manga
 * Zhang He from Dynasty Warriors and Warriors Orochi full stop.
 * Ion from Tales of the Abyss. Not only is he incredibly androgynous and has a very female-like voice, other people refuse to use pronouns to refer to him and instead say 'Ion'.
 * The Japanese version is slightly more difficult to confuse because his voice is more masculine and he uses a masculine pronoun to refer to himself... Mind you, there's a whole fetish around girls who do that, but most of those oddly act less feminine than Ion.
 * Jade gets a bit of this now and then, either from the especially feminine concept art or from the viewer only seeing a skit face, which shows the character from the shoulders up (he's quite pretty). The Gender Blender Name doesn't help matters.
 * When gamers first saw the NA cover art of Tales of Vesperia, many assumed that the box was depicting the hero and heroine of the game. Nope. The feminine looking one with the long black silky hair is the Hero of the game. The Guy with the blond hair is the rival. The actual heroine of the game is on the back of the box.
 * This is lampshaded near the begining of the game. If you go into the bar and speak to a certain NPC, he mistakes Yuri for a girl and asks him to join him for some drinks.
 * Fire Emblem has had a couple of examples such as Sephiran and Chainey, but the most amazing ur-example is Lucius, with his bright blue eyes, long, flowing blonde hair, and monk robes that made him look like he's wearing a form-fitting dress. Not a single person thought he was a man when they first saw his official art. His gentle, feminine, almost White Magician Girl personality really didn't help. Nor did his child-bearing hips. Or the fact that his main support conversation (and the only one with a double-ending for Lucius) is with another guy.
 * In the case of Lucius, it's even parodied in-game in one of Lucius's support conversations, where Serra mistakes him for a girl before he meekly corrects her.
 * Fire Emblem has had a couple of examples such as Sephiran and Chainey, but the most amazing ur-example is Lucius, with his bright blue eyes, long, flowing blonde hair, and monk robes that made him look like he's wearing a form-fitting dress. Not a single person thought he was a man when they first saw his official art. His gentle, feminine, almost White Magician Girl personality really didn't help. Nor did his child-bearing hips. Or the fact that his main support conversation (and the only one with a double-ending for Lucius) is with another guy.
 * In the case of Lucius, it's even parodied in-game in one of Lucius's support conversations, where Serra mistakes him for a girl before he meekly corrects her.


 * Marth got this by Super Smash Bros fans, partially due to the unusual first name, which is the male variant of Martha.
 * Ignore not the pretty tiara he wears.
 * Soren is girly enough to have been repeatedly taken for a Tsundere Sweet Polly Oliver. The Ho Yay with Ike doesn't help.
 * Starlow from Mario and Luigi: Bowser's Inside Story had some of this, at least in the English version. She's just a floaty little ball with feet and a star, and there is only one line referring to herself as female ("This is no way to treat a lady!"). However she has little eyelashes in the official art, but not in-game.
 * Kingdom Hearts always had its share of gender confusion. If you started playing the series with Chain of Memories, it takes quite a while to get everyone's chromosomes right, no thanks to the confusing pixel anatomy and strange, quasi-corset Organization coats making EVERYONE have an hourglass figure.
 * Marluxia was originally intended to be a woman. Due to "her" already slightly masculine appearance and the fact that this trope is par for the course for Square-Enix, they didn't actually have to change anything when they decided to make the switch. Amazingly enough, the Organization features only one lonely female (but no shortage of estrogen).
 * When the promo images of Kingdom Hearts were first released, there was a debate on a Disney forum about whether Riku was a boy or girl.
 * Rhyme from The World Ends With You. Of course, she's a young girl, so unless others are talking about her with pronouns, there's no way to tell. Another example of going by the game cover; it's obvious in-game. Not making it any easier for those playing The Japanese version -- turns out Rhyme is a Bokukko.
 * Kazooie, from Banjo-Kazooie, can be very confusing, given her brash character and utter lack of feminine traits. Rareware apparently got sick of it, though, since The Revival gave her a few Tertiary Sexual Characteristics.
 * Many players have mistaken Terry from Banjo-Tooie as a female, since he gets mad because he thinks you've stolen his eggs, and no gender is immediately given, you'd think that he laid the eggs and is the female. But according to the game's instruction manual, as well as some random dialogue from Zombie Jingaling, Terry's wife has left him, and therefore he is very protective of the eggs.
 * Kanan from Soul Nomad and The World Eaters. In fact, you'll probably need to pick a certain path in the main campaign to find out "she" is really a "he".
 * Gunstar Red from Gunstar Super Heroes is a girl. It's due either by reading the manual or by her gender being expressed ONCE that you would know this.
 * Lotte from the obscure SNES game Clock Tower is commonly confused for a guy... Despite having noticeable breasts, among other things.
 * This wiki even mentions that "Her name is Lotte." However; chances are most people didn't actually spot that name since the other characters have rather English sounding names (Jennifer, Laura, Bobby, Mary...)
 * The Game Overthinker summed Square-Enix's propensity for this rather nicely: "... Oh, wait, I think that's supposed to be a guy... Fucking Squaresoft!"
 * Ron Delite from Ace Attorney. He has all sorts of female characteristics, such as a pointy "egg" head shape, hair like that of Princess Leia and somewhat of a female face. Doesn't help that he's very kind, gentle and shy, and that his Maskâ˜†De Masque costume is very husky.
 * Nick and Deanna from the Shining Force Gaiden series are some of the worst examples of this, ever. Just look them up, and be confused. It doesn't help that Deanna has a name that's a woman's name everywhere but in this game.
 * Calintz, main character of the Magna Carta game (at least the one released in the West).
 * He's also the main of the original PC game... despite it otherwise having a totally different plot and setting. And he was, by reports, ridiculously feminine there, as well. The artist for the series apparently likes feminine men and ridiculously busty women.
 * Suikoden:
 * Secondary characters can invoke gender confusion in the player. Most notable of the examples is Milich from Suikoden 1 thanks to his extremely extravagant fashion tastes, the flower-themed palace, and noblewoman's laugh. Fortunately there is a way to know for sure if one is really that curious.
 * Some people had the same problem with Luc and Sasari in Suikoden II, looking at their portraits. The problem was rectified in the sequel, where both men had obviously male portraits and character models.
 * While almost immediately refered to as "Prince", preventing any confusion, the hero of Suikoden V is downright girly. Only when you look at him at a certain angle (And while wearing certain clothes) does he even begin to look male. Most of the time, he looks pretty hot.
 * When Subala's character art was revealed, most of the fandom assumed that she was a boy due to her completely flat chest. Much to their surprise, she turned out to be a 16-year-old girl.
 * The Night Dancer in Final Fantasy Tactics A2 plays with this. He appears to be the first female bangaa ever in the series, but once you try to uphold the law in any mission he appears it quickly turns out that he is, in fact, a crossdresser (and no, the game doesn't generalize by race when it comes to unique characters, even though the law sounds like it).
 * The Harvest Moon-iverse has Julius, who's... Well, just LOOK at him! His favorite items are even things like jewelry and perfume! If it weren't for his name, it'd be next to impossible to tell that he's supposed to be a dude. And yes, you can marry him if you're playing as a girl. Sort of a shame, since there'd certainly be players who would marry him if he were in fact a woman. He doesn't even have the name to help him in Japan, where his name is Juli. The whole joke was that Candace/Kotomi was bullied by Juli as a child, and always thought he was a girl. Then she grows up, meets him again after so many years, and is shocked to discover that the girl who bullied her was a boy the whole time.
 * There's also Jamie from Magical Melody, who is always the opposite gender of your character, but they have the same sprite regardless (and hides this fact well by having Jamie wear a poncho the whole game).
 * In Fallout 3, many viewers were led to the impression that Fawkes was female, not because of any physical characteristics, but due to misunderstanding a laboratory log in game. After a bitter, lingering controversy, stoked by public comment from the voice actor who played Fawkes, the issue was finally resolved by Word Of God.
 * Thanks to voice acting being brought into the second game, Ni GHTS from said titular game now speaks with a posh woman's accent, causing many people to think that they're a woman despite it being confirmed that Nights has no gender. Ni GHTS' voice can be interpreted either as a woman or a young boy; it sounds equally like both.
 * Birdo from Super Mario Bros. 2. While there is more than one member of the species (much like Yoshi), the main one featured in the games is a male...most of the time. Nintendo has changed Birdo's official gender from male to female to not really saying if it's one or the other.
 * Emilio Michaelov from Psychic Force, at least in the Japanese version, has a very feminime, timid voice, combined with his wings and even androgynious body shape and hair The US voice acting does remove this doubt, at cost of the quality of his voice.
 * Dynasty Warriors characters:
 * Zhange He -- Long hair, sometimes butterfly wings, pink and purple clothes, flowers EVERYWHERE. The only way you can tell his gender is by his voice.
 * Lu Xun -- tiny, pretty, big eyes, slight body, looks like a prepubescent girl.
 * Likewise, Ranmaru from Samurai Warriors. He even confuses people in-game.
 * Shinta Kikuchi from Osu Tatakae Ouendan. Look at him/her. He's pretty much Ron DeLite without the Leia-hair.
 * 3 in Three. You might think a talking number would be neuter, not feminine...
 * Would you believe THIS, from Ty the Tasmanian Tiger had me thinking she was male? In all fairness, the voice acting sounds like a man trying to sound female, and bungling it, and from a decent distance, you can't make out the breasts. Also, Ty backs away in panic.
 * Arno from Summon Night 2: Swordcraft Story. Is it a boy, or a girl? Th characters never find out, Arno never goes by any sort of pronoun and him/herself a "child of the wind", and doesn't know their own gender...The only clue we ever get is one of the villains shouting "you neutered freak!" And it's not even a big clue at all. Seriously, you tell me.
 * Mao in Shadow Hearts: From The New World. That's a man's voice coming out of that cat, and yet it's supposedly a female. Since Mao's a cat without any form of Tertiary Sexual Characteristics, the confusion gets racked up. (She only refers to her gender a small handful of times, easily missed.)
 * Animal Crossing:
 * Meet Bob. Bob is a kitty. Bob is purple. Bob loves to wear pretty dresses. Bob is a dude.
 * Animal Crossing has way too many other examples of this, too.
 * Likewise with Blanca, Gracie and Saharah are male... in Japan. A few villagers also get this trope.
 * Wriggle Nightbug from Imperishable Night is sometimes mistaken for a boy, due to her being one of the few Touhou characters to wear pants instead of a dress.
 * This is not in effect for Mokou from the same game, despite also wearing something other than a dress-- her name (lit. Scarlet Little Sister) gives it away.
 * The confusion strikes again, this time with Toramaru Shou from Undefined Fantastic Object, who does look overly masculine-- tiger stripes and all.
 * And for a trip back in time to PC-98 days, we have the samurai Meira, whose battle challenge was mistaken by Reimu for a marriage proposition.
 * Teepo of Breath of Fire III. Long purple hair, acts like a tomboy, doesn't get referred to using a pronoun until literally the end of the game. Yes, he is supposed to be a boy.
 * Many people confuse Ammy from Okami as a male. Issun constantly referring to her as a god rather than a goddess doesn't help.
 * The American localization was actually trying to keep Ammy as androgynous as possible, mostly since the United State's primary religion has God to be definitively male.
 * Kanon from Umineko no Naku Koro ni can be easily confused for a woman when you first see him. Lion from EP 7 is even worse. But in this case it's intentional, since nobody knows what Lion's gender is.
 * You can make this happen yourself with the custom players in Backyard Sports: you can make a boy wear girly clothes and sound like a girl, or a girl look and sound like a boy.
 * Earthbound:
 * Giygas falls under this. Officially, Giygas is a "he". But, thanks to a random NPC in the game, several members of the fandom have mistaken "him" for a female.
 * In Japan, Giygas/Gyiyg/whatever has an ambiguous gender; it's never defined as explicitly male or female, but that's much easier to avoid in Japanese than English.
 * Ness falls victim to this for the Super Smash Brothers players who haven't played Earthbound before.
 * King croacus from Super Paper Mario is such, despite his obviously masculine title, he has girly eyelashes, a beauty mark, and big red lips.
 * Grandia: Thanks to the way he's drawn in promotional art (and his appearance in general), you could easily mistake Justin for a girl until you learn his name or hear his voice.
 * Wartech: Senko no Ronde: Cuilan. Here HE is.
 * Vivian, from Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door. In the Japanese release, she's transgender and her sisters treat her poorly because of it (arguably also out of jealously that a male could be so much more effeminate than they are). Like Birdo, this was changed for the US release, making her female from the start and pretty much destroying any real reason for her sisters to be so cruel to her.
 * Pokémon Gold and Silver:
 * Bugsy.
 * Somewhat long hair, too young to make out sexual characteristics, unusual name that isn't easily gender identifiable, rather ambiguous clothes. Hey, your guess is as good as mine.
 * Supposedly male...but yeah, the fact that his Pokémon are all female doesn't help (enemy trainers usually have Pokémon that are their own gender.)
 * Will of the Elite Four has the same issue as Bugsy--despite being male his entire team is female. Both his in-game sprite and the Sugimori art also give him Hartman Hips.
 * Pokémon Special actually made fun of this.
 * Also, Lopunny. There is a 50/50 chance that the Pokémon is a male/female, and it doesn't help that (s)he has a feminine appearance. It helps even less that most people say the name is a caricature of Playboy Bunnies.
 * A better example would be the Ralts line. They are supposed to be ballerina based however their "clothing" is feminine. As in "female tutu" and "dress" feminine. They gained a male counterpart the next gen, however you still have to go through the Kirlia stage and the males evolve by a (somewhat rare) evolutionary stone.
 * Even odder, Gardevoir has a very masculine name in Japan. Sirknight, which has both "Sir" and "knight" in it (while knights can be female, we typically think of male ones); though it may also refer to "come, Knight"
 * And then there's the Generation V counterparts Gothita, Gothorita and Gothitelle, which have a 25% chance of being male.
 * Silver, your Johto rival, invokes this. In the remakes they gave him a more masculine appearance however he still invokes this due to his young age, Bishonen good looks, and long hair.
 * Mostly for Tate; because Tate can actually be a feminine name, too, outside of Fire Emblem 6. To clarify, Tate is the boy, and Liza the girl.
 * Wallace. With that pose, cyan styled hair, and fabulous clothes, anyone could mistake him for a girl and never know the truth.
 * Cheren from Pokémon Black and White. His Sugimori art makes him less ambiguous.
 * This also could have occurred to the translation team for Ruby and Sapphire, who named a Team Magma admin with a slightly ambiguous-looking sprite the very feminine "Tabitha." Unfortunately, Tabitha is a man.
 * US players of the original Phantasy Star had a couple of examples. First there's the Bishounen Noah who is referred to by both gender pronouns thanks to the Blind Idiot Translation. Thankfully the re-release on the Gameboy Advance fixed it so he's always referred to as a male. Then there's the cat-like Myau, whose gender is never revealed in the Japanese version nor have I ever heard an Word of God on the topic.
 * Flea from Chrono Trigger. He's so girly that the entire party (in particular Marle) is shocked to learn he's a guy.
 * Doesn't help his official artwork is buxom. Maybe he's a Hermaphrodite?
 * In Chrono Cross, Flea is wearing a pink-and-white schoolgirl uniform with a cute pink hairstyle.
 * Invoked in Baldur's Gate. An early sidequest has you hunting down a deranged necromancer serial killer, and when you track him down, he confuses you for his dead parent...of the opposite gender then you.
 * BioWare tends to avert this by giving the female characters either scanty clothing or large breasts. The only exceptions are Jack, who they make a point of not using gender-specific pronouns for her until you see her rising out of cryo, and Shale, who is a golem and doesn't give you any physiological clues as to her gender.
 * Brenda from Muscle March is officially female, but given that she's as ridiculously muscular as the other characters (with the exception of the polar bear), and the Hard Gay overtones of the rest of the game, it's easy to be confused.
 * Ranmaru from Sakura Taisen V. Always referred to with male pronouns... but only referred to with any pronouns starting in Chapter 6, when he's been appearing all game. With a high-pitched voice and very effeminate mannerisms. Given that he's most likely the same Ranmaru mentioned under the Art section, it's not too surprising.
 * Samurai Warriors has Ranmaru Mori (who's even voiced by a woman) and is actually mistaken for a girl by Magoichi. The newest game brings forth Hanbei Takenaka, who is older than Ranmaru but still looks very feminine. The fact that he's seen disguised as a woman in his opening doesn't hepl either...
 * Uesugi Kenshin from Sengoku Basara who is extremely pretty with delicate features and is voiced by Romi Paku. Takenaka Hanbei and Mouri Motonari have similar problems, as not only are they pretty they also have rather curvaceous hips.
 * Prince Pixel of Graffiti Kingdom. Granted, it's because he's a little boy and he's almost immediately called "Prince", but the fact that he has those huge eyelashes coupled with his female sidekick having a deeper voice than him makes it hard to believe that you're playing as a prince.
 * Some fans claim Kirby is genderless despite the many canonical references to his gender.
 * Coo the Owl looks very feminine, but is actually a male...at least outside of Japan, anyway.
 * Ehl from Solatorobo is a boy, to the surprise of many a gamer. The pink-ish fur and stockings don't exactly help with the issue.
 * In the first Tekken, Kunimitsu was an Ambiguous Gender Palette Swap of Yoshimitsu with the same voice, but was made distinctly female in the second game.
 * Golden Sun: Dark Dawn
 * When the first playable Water Adept was revealed, fans were confused by "Crown", who wears an absurdly short tunic and leggings similar to Karis's, has blue hair in a bowl cut, fights similarly to Mia, and has high-pitched squeaks for a voice. "Crown" was renamed Rief for the dub, which makes his gender a little more clear: the dude looks like a little girl.
 * Then the second playable Water Adept was revealed. A slender, Moe Inegenue whose name in Japanese is phonetically identical to "Harmony". And an introductory storyline including an extnded Shirtless Scene. The European official site cited the redubbed Amiti as a girl for a while, and we can't really blame them for being confused.
 * Dark Souls: It's easy to mistake the androgynous Gwyndolin for a woman. It's how he was raised.
 * In universe example with Minogame from Hellsinker whose gender is described as impossible to tell from appearence..
 * In the original Rainbow Six trilogy, male and female operatives look identical in-game.
 * Dorrie from Super Mario 64 falls under this. Cutesy-looking plesiosaur with a feminine sounding name? Sounds like a girl, right? Nope, Dorrie's a boy. All official descriptions of the character refer Dorrie as a "he".
 * In the Etrian Odyssey series, you always have two male and two female character designs for each class. In several cases, at least one of the male designs could easily pass for a girl, while there are a few potential Bifauxnen. The Survivalists and Troubadours from I/II are prime examples, are are the Hoplite of III and the Swordsmen of IV.