Nier Replicant Still Portrays Queer Bodies with Brutal Honesty

Contains spoilers for the first half of the game
Early in Nier Replicant ver.1.22474487139…, the forthcoming update of 2010’s Nier, Kainé urges a young boy named Emil not to be ashamed of his eyes. She brushes against the bandages he uses to cover them, then presses his hand to her arm, showing him the fulminating spark of her curse. Kainé is possessed by a Shade, a shadowy creature that thrives somewhat parasitically inside her body. Shades claim anyone they come into contact with, and slowly threaten the few civilizations left standing in the world. For this reason, Kainé is seen as a grim omen, a lightning rod who attracts disaster wherever she goes. Emil, meanwhile, has a Medusa-esque ability to petrify anyone he looks at. It’s an extraordinary ability, but one that forces him to live a lonely life separate from other people.
Later, we learn Kainé is an intersex woman. After being violently bullied by the children in her village, she lived on the outskirts of society with her nurturing (but foulmouthed) grandmother. We also eventually learn that Emil is gay—he wistfully wishes he and Nier could marry. This recontextualizes Kainé’s plea for Emil to accept himself as not just being about their individual bodies, but about their apparent queerness as well. Denied of a community in an already decaying world, Kainé and Emil share a unique connection and a similar struggle despite their wholly different personalities. This echoes my own queer experience; we aren’t necessarily drawn to people who are particularly similar to us, but instead our chosen families are disparate.
Kainé and Emil both have bodies that are deemed as dangerous. Despite their persecution, both are entirely selfless—they dedicate themselves to helping Nier in his quest to find Yonah, and assist in saving Nier’s village from Shade invasions. Nier creator Yoko Taro is known for incorporating themes of post-trauma nationalism in his games, and Nier Replicant is a prime example of this. Living in constant fear of terroristic attacks, the denizens of Nier’s village and those of neighboring settlements treat their own with suspicion and ostracize those who transgress popular ideas of how people should look and behave. To them, it’s a means of survival; for Kainé and Emil, it’s proof they’re freaks, people who could never live a traditional life and rely on themselves to get by.