The original edition of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles & Other Strangeness was published with a section detailing a comprehensive list of mental illnesses ostensibly drawn from the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. Players could either select a form of insanity as an optional step in character creation or randomly assign one during the course of gameplay as a result of their characters undergoing some kind of trauma, such as demonic possession, near-death experience, or torture.
specifically:
After parents of younger players objected to the list of sexual deviations – which had previously appeared in the Palladium Role-Playing Game and Heroes Unlimited rulebooks – Palladium Books covered it with a plain white sticker. Subsequent printings removed the list of mental illnesses entirely, although occasional references to it remained elsewhere in the book.
I completely understand the PC reasons why sexual deviation tables would be taken out, but I do wonder if perhaps they might be provided as a list of online errata?
As controversial as the idea is of trauma changing someone from one orientation to the other, it's not necessarily any more extreme than the 'reborn' option which switches someone's alignment from good to evil or vice versa almost as Azlum does.
If it isn't possible to provide a copy of this and a guideline on how to work it into existing insanity tables, I am wondering if anyone has info in regard to which editions of which old books might have it.
I think it could be possible to represent a wide range of things under the 'insanity' system without actually implying everything there is insanity. I mean really, in all neutrality, we have things like 'obsession' and it is not outside of saneness to have an obsession with something. Insanity means out of touch with reality, and if someone is obsessed with say, earning money, that doesn't mean they're out of touch with reality, just that they have a different value systems.
It could cover stuff like say, switching to (or from) a vegetarian diet, or a change in fashion preferences or hair cut, changes in how one grooms oneself, etc. If we cover other mundane things, I think stuff like 'the gender characteristics that you prefer change' being a result of trauma would be less singled out and less likely to offend.
Not to mean that it should be included in any future books, but I don't see the harm in optional errata or whatever.