Hello Blizzard!
There are titles that appear to be restricted to only specific body types. An example is the Fun Guy title, which is restricted to Body Type 1 characters, whereas the Fun Gal title is restricted to Body Type 2 characters.
Can we please remove this restriction for all titles that are restricted to specific body types? I would love to be able to use the Fun Gal title on my Body Type 2 characters.
Thank you!
Account ignore please Blizzard.
18 Likes
Bad faith poster but an excellent idea.
We should be able to swap pronouns at the barber shop, and/or titles shouldn’t be locked to body type.

3 Likes
That’s how it’s supposed to be …………….
1 Like
Hello friend! Absolutely!
Or just go to your title page and select once for feminine pronouns and select twice for male pronouns. I think that’d be easier nstead of going the barber shop every time u dont like lady of war or lord of war.
Or it just…has all the titles there for everybody. Fun Guy? Fun Gal? Everybody can use both. 
3 Likes
No what I mean is like, you can use them both but if you want one or the other you select it once for one and twice for the other. Like it comes up as fun gal but then you select it again you get fun guy sort of like a toggle
Ngl. A burly dwarven man with a massive bushy beard sounds like it would be fun to have “A fun gal” title. I’d imagine it was from a story that involved a lot of drinking at the local pub.
And here I am wishing they just remove character restrictions on titles.
Lord/Lady of War account wide Blizzard. It’s long over due.
Hello friend! That sounds a little confusing. I think they should just all be visible at the same time.
Yeah, but having them all display at once plus with your current titles it can get a bit disorganized.
well luckily for you, you can already use the fun gal title on the female gender, aka body type 2.
2 Likes
Ik this is a troll post, but as with Lord of War / Lady of War, you can keep the title associated with the gender you had at the time you earned it, go to the barber, change your gender, and still keep the original pronoun.