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The remake of the Nintendo game “Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door” will include a trans-identifying character after discourse referring to the character’s gender identity was removed from the original U.S. version of the game. The Paper Mario game was originally released for GameCube in 2004, and Nintendo released a remake for the Nintendo Switch gaming system. In the remake, Vivian, a purple ghost who wears a striped hat, now has an exchange with Mario in which he discusses his self-declared gender identity.

Vivian initially serves as a villain in the game alongside his sisters, Bedlam and Marilyn, but he later joins Mario’s team because the Italian plumber is kind to him, whereas his sisters frequently bully him. According to a review of the game by Nintendo Life, Vivian, who was born a boy, was written as a trans-identifying character in the original Japanese version of the game intended for the Nintendo GameCube. The 2004 U.S. version of the Mario game removed the lines discussing Vivian’s gender identity, but the remake has restored them.

“Truth is, it took me a while to realize I was their sister, not their brother. Now their usual bullying feels heavier,” Vivian tells Mario in the 2024 version, according to a photo of the game’s remake shared by the X account No Context Super Mario. However, the news of the remake of the Paper Mario game hasn’t been without its share of controversy. In an X post, Libs of TikTok accused Nintendo of going “woke,” while others argued that Nintendo was correct in including what was already in the original script. Libs of TikTok wrote, “They just introduced a transgender character in a kid’s game. Vivian discusses [his] gender identity and [his] sisters’ transphobia with Mario. [He] says [he] realized [he] “was their sister … not their brother.”

Trans-identified writer Ari Drennen applauded the decision in a post on X, writing, “Hell yeah, Nintendo” in response to Libs of TikTok’s post about the game. “Vivian was originally portrayed as transgender in the 2004 Japanese version of this game,” Drennen wrote. “This was censored in the United States, the land of the free. The remake was not censored in the same way.” The remake of “Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door” is not the first game aimed at younger audiences to feature a trans-identifying character. Last year, the creators of “The Sims 4,” the fourth entry in a series of life simulation games, announced a new feature that would allow players to express themselves and “customize every detail.”

The new features included the ability to add so-called “medical wearables” such as breast “binders,” which are worn by girls who identify as boys to flatten their chests. In addition, players could have their characters wear shapewear that creates a bulge in underwear so a female who identifies as male could look like she has male genitalia. Another feature allowed players to give their characters a “top surgery scar” to signify breast removal.

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