No, I still can’t see the major role in it. Leading charge doesn’t mean leading army. You are not superhero. Persuading nobles (as a bard) to fight one another (in a fist fight?) says nothing about how big the role is. I don’t say a character has no impact on the story, I say he has no major impact on politics of the country. He is not meant to change history. It has been said repeatedly. And if by that female character problem grows smaller, then i really don’t get why you used it as an argument to prove exact opposite in your first post. You are contradicting yourself again.
I’m basing my posts on the very same facts you have given away, though I have come to different conclusion, because I don’t consider rare examples as a rule. And yes, I consider dozens of examples even in 400 years period as very rare. We are talking about dozens out of at least tens of millions through generations so I’m pretty convinced it is the very definition of “almost impossible”. So I’m basing my opinion on fact that women were not warriors, which you actually prove by examples of like 0,0001% of them who were. Hence I don’t find relevant how these super rare women were treated because they were…total freaking exeptions and by no mean believable heroines of realistic medieval game.
And your question for examples of heroic men is also kinda core problem, beacause the game main character is “not superhero”. So to fit in more or less believable character you don’t need representative of 0,0001% minority, but you can pick one out of hundreds of thousands of soldiers in medieval history.
I would never say women had no impact on our world, this is not what I was talking about at all. I can’t see how it is relevant.
About that 40% thing - i didn’t say women don’t play RPGs, I said they are not 40% of RPG players and no, I don’t have statistics, it’s just my opinion. I don’t know what they showed you at courses, but I hope they showed you these 40%, because they are probably very good at conspiring.