#bellletstalkday2018 was a great success. This conversation is also about more than one day. Let's keep the conversation. Going. .. .. .. #keeptalking #ongoingconversation #bellletstalk #endstigma #stopsuicide
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#bellletstalkday2018 was a great success. This conversation is also about more than one day. Let's keep the conversation. Going. .. .. .. #keeptalking #ongoingconversation #bellletstalk #endstigma #stopsuicide

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Thanks guys for being such polite anons but I have already answered your questions and if you would like to click the "ongoingconversation" tag you will be able to see the entire progressing of posts that lead to the answer you seek.
The term "Femshep" has largely become a term of endearment specifically intended for the female version of Commander Shepard. "Shep" and "Shepard" are all good and well for their neutrality, but some fans (myself included) want to distinguish between the two genders on account of Jennifer Hale's outstanding voice acting. And to some, bearing the weight of the galaxy on a woman's shoulders is difference enough to warrant a gender prefix before the infamous last name. And femEvans isn't so bad. :)
This sounds like a very nice explanation but If this was the case we would call man shepard, maleshep or mascshep.
Jennifer Hale is a great voice actress and I don’t see the need to be explicit about which Shepard she voices. The significance of a woman saving the galaxy is that a video game company has chosen to have the option of female protagonist that successfully avoids many tropes. A woman saving the galaxy is not any more of an unthinkable feat then a man saving the galaxy, it is just underrepresented. The weight of the galaxy is the same no matter which gender saves it; that is one of the best aspects of this game.
The progress of having a tropeless video game female is undermined by the need to add a prefix to her name that implies a gender standard. I say gender standard and not gender because the Shep that I played was never very feminine and I am sure that you could play a male Shepard that is not very masculine if you wanted to.
No one in the game calls female Shepard ‘femshep’, that would be a very disrespectful way to speak about a commanding officer. I just don’t see how adding fem to the front of someone’s name is a sign of respect.
If we wanted a fast way to explain in conversations how you play the game it would be more functional to create alignment prefixes then gender prefixes. Why don’t we say thing like “I was playing as ParaShep when…” or “My RenShep kicked ass.”
If you don’t call Male Shepard ‘mascShep’ I don’t think that female Shepard should be called ‘femShep’. Don’t call me femEvans, ever.
It irks me when people say femshep, it’s just Shep or Shepard. No one calls me femEvans just because my brother is also Evans.