I don't care if it makes you do it in real life
I do.
You want something done for reasons that are not true or are not relevant. That I care for. If you take those fallacious reasons away, you just try to impose your morals onto other people, which would not be relevant. We are still talking about fiction. But you seem to not make a difference. We can't just ban everything that someone is offended about.
As a society we do not even ban real things like alcohol or tobacco. Things that are proven to be harmful and addictive. Yet you want to remove a thing that is neither and fictional on top. Because you think it is disgusting and morally wrong and whatnot. The fiction about it! There is no discussion about the real thing being quite bad. But you seem to conflate those two. And you seem to make inferences about what fictional things someone finds entertaining to what kind of person that is. This is rather arrogant. I like Dexter. A show about a serial killer as the protagonist. A lot of people love the show Breaking Bad. The hero creates drugs and does a lot of bad things. What is your opinion about all those people liking things that are very bad?! Sorry, liking fiction about things that are very bad.
Please get this in your head. Fiction is fiction. We like fiction. We like fiction about forbidden things. If a woman reads rape fantasy smut novels, it does not mean she wants to get raped. And if someone plays a rape fantasy game, it does not mean they want to rape someone.
You seem to think otherwise. If so, you are wrong.
We live in a society where rape is normalized.
Not to my observation. Quite the contrary.
Ask the AI of your choice for a summary. I asked the big one this:
How did the acceptance of rape in the last 70 years change over time? Did it change? Was it normalized?
It gave a nice summary and gave corner stones per decade what changed. Especially the rape in marriage changed a lot. For the "normalization" it said:
Has It Been Normalized?
Historically: Yes, rape was often normalized—especially in marriage, war, and patriarchal cultures.
Today: It is much less accepted, but rape culture (jokes, victim-blaming, minimization) still exists in many places.
Progress: There's been major progress in awareness, advocacy, and laws. But social and legal change is uneven globally.
So if you think rape is normalized where you live, maybe fight that, instead of fiction. There are places that make worrying news sometimes.