You keep bringing up how many fascist themes there are in so many other video games, with a focus on shooters and rpgs. you could have easily titled your manifesto 'kill fascism in games' or something like that. but you, and so many others here in this jam and elsewhere, explicitly chose to target cozy games. why? why the 'it's okay to relax' genre and not the 'kill all the definitely bad people and prove your inherent supremacy' genres? there's no particular reason that the cupcake analogy only needs to apply to goods with a high sugar content.
the explanation you've given is this: "I agree and commented on the fact that "cozy games" have more marginalized devs and gamers (players) than most other showcases. I completely concur. I did not write a manifesto called KILL FIRST PERSON SHOOTERS even though I also think that the FPS genre propagates fascist values, as I explained in my manifesto. I wrote a manifesto called KILL COZY GAMES because I think that marginalized developers and players, more than anyone, should have access to comfort games and cozy games that do not propagate fascist values. Yes, I think that there should exist first person shooters which do not propagate fascist values, too. However, I do not think (and I am not saying that you said this) that genres by and for marginalized people are above criticism. Marginalized people exist in fascist societies and learn these values. We must actively reject and resist the propagation of these values in our art and in our leisure."
you've acknowledged cozy games as games often played and created by and for the marginalized... and you've chosen to focus on *them* as not being good enough and not the genres created primarily by cishet white men that far more consistently (and often intentionally) propagate those fascist values?
i will ask you to take some time and sit with this question: is what you're doing workable? does focusing your critique on asking the marginalized to do better actually move things in the direction of your values? or are you simply demanding a heavier burden and more intense scrutiny on an already burdened and scrutinized population, making it even harder for them to create and explore things?
obviously i think the answer is closer to the latter right now, but that's why i'm asking you to sit with the question. you don't have to take my answer just because i said it, but you do need to reflect on it with compassion for yourself.