Anime Feminist Examines Fate Series' History of Genderbending
The analysis positions Fate's genderbending not as a gimmick but as a sustained narrative device that has evolved alongside the franchise's growing awareness of gender diversity, drawing attention to historical women and nonbinary perspectives.
Reporting from 1 sources: Anime Feminist.
Anime Feminist published a long-form analysis on March 4, 2026, examining the history and narrative function of genderbent characters in the Fate franchise, from its first installment Fate/stay night (2004) through Fate/Grand Order (2015-present). The piece argues that the series' practice of reimagining historical male figures as women is not merely a marketing ploy but frequently serves character development and thematic exploration of identity, personhood, and the cost of surrendering oneself to an ideal. The analysis focuses on King Arthur, the franchise's first genderbent character, whose identity as a woman is central to her arc and her relationship with protagonist Shirou Emiya. The article also examines later characters like Mordred, Nero Claudius, and Okita Souji as self-referential iterations on the original Saber design, and discusses how the series uses its genderbending framework to spotlight lesser-known historical women, such as Katsushika Ōi and Tokimura Michi. It notes that Fate's approach to gender has become less binary over time, with explicitly nonbinary characters like Chevalier d'Eon, Qin Shi Huang, and Romulus appearing in Fate/Grand Order. The piece acknowledges that not all of the franchise's gender experiments are tasteful, sometimes veering into fetishism, but concludes that the series shows a consistent, decades-long interest in exploring gender and identity.
The piece traces how Fate/stay night's Saber uses her gender as a symbol of personhood subsumed by her role as king, a theme that later characters like Mordred and Nero Claudius riff on with self-referential designs. It notes that many genderbends have historical or folkloric basis: Nero reportedly enjoyed playing female theater roles, and Uesugi Kenshin has a Wikipedia page dedicated to the theory he was actually a woman. The article highlights how Fate/Grand Order introduces female versions of figures like Katsushika Hokusai (actually his daughter Ōi) and Kyokutei Bakin (using his daughter-in-law's appearance) to spotlight women whose contributions are often overlooked. It also discusses explicitly nonbinary characters introduced over time, from Chevalier d'Eon's coy handling at launch in 2015 to Qin Shi Huang's deliberate discarding of gender in 2018 and Romulus's post-release update in 2020. The piece acknowledges missteps where the series becomes fetishistic or loses nuance, but argues the franchise's overall trajectory shows a genuine interest in exploring gender and identity.
Synthesized by Yomimono from the 1 cited source below, including Japanese-language reporting where cited, then editorially reviewed before publishing.