Self Fanservice: Difference between revisions

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* ''[[Beyond Good & Evil (video game)|Beyond Good and Evil]]'s'' Jade, although attractive on her own, is known for her ''lack'' of fanservicey-ness, because, in contrast to [[Third Person Seductress|the trends where many female game protagonists are involved]], she dresses sensibly and has realistic, er, [[Most Common Superpower|proportions]]. Along come the fanartists, dressing her in [[Stripperiffic|skimpy clothing]] and giving her a bustline ranging from "maybe she's wearing a push-up bra in this one" to [[Gag Boobs|"Holy back problems, Batman!"]]
** On the fan''girl'' end of the scale, there's Double H. Although he has an [[Adorkable|appealing personality]], his character design isn't especially attractive. Fanart either tends to soften his extremer traits, making him more conventionally handsome, or ignore them completely to make him cute and adorable.
* A divisive example of this is fan-made mods for games like [[The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim|Skyrim]] and the [[Dragon Age]] series, where in-game modifications to "beautify" characters like Aela the Huntress and Aveline exist, though male characters aren't immune either. Far more controversial are the mods that give Dragon Age's Isabella [[Race Lift|lighter skin]], especially if they're explicitly stated by the mod's creator to be self-fanservice.
 
== Web Comics ==