Do you like pretty women who dress modestly, have a mild demeanor, and a feminine way about them?
Then you're just the worst.
Or so the left wants people to think. Something about women displaying a conservative form of feminine beauty just gets their blood boiling. Women are often attacked for that kind of thing, and while the reasons are many, the primary reason is that a feminine woman is usually not a feminist woman.
That's a major problem, because feminine women tend to be women who like men and want to create a home with them, and when that happens, they tend to drift away from the leftist principles that comprise the feminist ideological lifestyle. Moreover, men tend to like feminine women, and if men like it, then it has to be bad. Women must be dissuaded from attracting the attention of men at all costs, unless said attention is purely based on a transactional situation.
As such, it's super important to make sure that the culture does not display this traditional, modest, and male-friendly femininity as a positive.
Sadly for them, they cannot control the growing indie industry happening in entertainment, and all they can do is try to defame and ridicule indie creators in the hopes that they'll cave to the pressure and create women who look more like the kind you'd see in a modern university setting than anything you'd see in a church on Sunday.
Jan Tichota and Aamn Chahrour, two developers working on the game "Knight's Path," an upcoming indie RPG taking place in a low-fantasy medieval setting, have been showing off some of the assets and characters in their game, and one of them is a woman named Amelie. According to the devs, Amelie will be a romance option for players. One of three, in fact.
They released a post on X describing her as a "beekeeper, herbalist, and healer," who has a "soul and voice sweeter than the healing honey she makes."
As you can see in the rotating model, Amelie is a pretty young woman with braided blond hair with a yellow dress and a cream colored hood. She holds a basket of yellow flowers, and her feet are bare, likely to emphasize her connection with nature.
Meet Amelie.
— Knight's Path (@Knights_Path) May 31, 2026
- Beekeeper, herbalist, and healer.
- With a soul and voice sweeter than the healing honey she makes.
- One of the three romance options in Knight’s Path. pic.twitter.com/sCrQi3Cse7
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Now, in a normal world, this wouldn't remotely be controversial. It's just a beautiful lady who exhibits warmth and charm.
But, to the left, Amelie is an insult to the senses. She's not just a character that plays to the male gaze; she has a personality that plays to the male fantasy, too. You know... a woman who is kind and caring, and likely very helpful. That can't stand. She has to be ridiculed and denounced, and the devs accused of something they see as wildly sinister.
"Seems like ur just making trad wife porn for right wingers," said an X user who, despite having only five followers, managed to garner 2.7k likes and 66 reposts as of this writing.
Seems like ur just making trad wife porn for right wingers
— mandoo (@mandoooooooo747) May 31, 2026
To be clear, the backlash to this ridiculous comment has been severe and complete, but I want to peer at the response, or rather, the implication behind it.
The implication is, in my opinion, that the left truly fears a feminine woman. A woman who subscribes to traditionalism, to any healthy degree, is a threat to the body politic and the narrative. The idea that a woman could be happy as a married woman with children, who loves her husband, and maybe even (horror of horrors) relies on him to provide and protect, is a horrifying concept that could ruin the modern movement if it became trendy.
And it is becoming trendy. Not because it's gaining popularity in tastemaker circles, but despite it. Many women are finding out that the careers they were pushed into committing to leave them lonely, unfulfilled, and bitter. The irony is that they were told submitting to a husband was the same as submitting to slavery, and they're finding out that they were submitting, instead, to managers, department heads, and corporations that don't care about them anyway.
If they see men gravitating toward feminine energy and approving of it, it might give young women dangerous ideas.
Best to make sure the choice is never seen or thought of.
But it's not working out so well.






