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Tropes that may apply to these examples as per Gender-Blending Tropes and Queer as Tropes:

Other recurring trends not covered by tropes that appear in these examples:

  • "Trans Sex Worker": A trans character does sex work. Related to Trans Chaser.
  • "Gender Affirming Activity": A trans character does a "gender-typical" activity as a means to become more comfortable with their identity, or as an initiation ritual.
  • "Gender Euphoria Moment": A trans character experiences euphoria as an experience of being gendered correctly.
  • "Hypermasculine Trans Woman": Trans women being stereotyped (often negatively) as masculine, even in comparison to male characters.
  • "Mid Story Gender Change": A character's gender changes during the story. May not be trans-exclusive.
  • "Trans in the Adaptation": A character who was cis in the original source material is rewritten to be transgender in an adaptation.
  • "Trans Option": Similar to Gay Option, this would be video games allowing the creation of transgender characters.
  • "Transgender Facade": A character pretends to be transgender. Another trope that may have Unfortunate Implications.
  • "Nonbinary Means Androgyny": The tendency to depict nonbinary characters with an androgynous appearance, either blending masculine or feminine traits or avoiding stereotypical "gendered" outfits altogether. A stereotype trope similar to Camp Gay or Butch Lesbian. May or may not include aversions.
  • "Mistaken For Trans": A subtrope of Dude Looks Like a Lady and Lady Looks Like a Dude (if it's worth splitting off) where cis characters are mistaken for being transgender.
  • "Out And Proud": Queer characters who show no shame in their sexuality or gender identity, and are in fact very outspoken about it.

Characters that lack the information to fit any of these tropes will simply be listed as "Simply Trans".

Stories focusing on trans characters will be tagged with "Trans Work" for the purpose of drafting an index.

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    Advertising 
  • A 2019 Gillette's razors ad shows a trans man shaving with his father for the first time. Gender Affirming Activity
  • A 1997 Holiday's Inn ad features a trans woman going to her 22-year class reunion. The woman is confident and gets stared at by several men as she passes by, but the punchline is that she's a trans woman. It received complaints about transphobic Unfortunate Implications and was pulled.
  • In a Sprite ad for Latin-America, a guy reunites with his school friends, and each encounter reveals the friend to have, over the years, acquired characteristics apparently at odds with their childhood nickname, finishing with "[insert friend's childhood nickname], eeeeeeeh!" and a hug/group hug. The last one, nicknamed "Oso" ("bear" in Spanish), turns out to have transitioned from male to female; we only see her from the back but she's clearly using heels and a minidress. What do her friends do? "Oso...? [blinkblink] OSO!! EEEEEEEH! [group hug]". Old Friend, New Gender
  • A U.K. commercial for Starbucks features a trans teen being called his dead name throughout his day, until he goes to Starbucks and asks them to put his actual name, James, on the cup, making him smile for the first time all day. Trans Tribulations, Gender Euphoria Moment, Do Not Call Me "Paul"
  • A campaign for Secret deodorant centers around stressful situations that would cause women to sweat. One ad has a trans woman named Dana using a public restroom, stressing over whether she should exit the stall in front of other women. Once she exits, however, the women only have nice things to say. The onscreen text says, "Dana finds the courage to find out there's no wrong way to be a woman." Subverted Trans Tribulations

    Comic Books 
  • The Accords features two trans heroes, trans woman Segura and trans man Sire. Simply Trans
  • One memorable story in Astro City involves a teenage Mad Scientist who was Maddened Into Misanthropy after years of trying to stay in the closet.
  • Alisa Yeoh, a supporting character and Barbara Gordon's roommate in Batgirl is a trans woman as revealed in issue 19. Though reported by multiple media outlets as "the first" transgender character in a superhero comic, author Gail Simone has repeatedly stated that this is not the case, as the Sandman example and others show. Simply Trans
  • The Highland Laddie arc of The Boys had a secondary character known as Big Bobby, first met in a pub wearing heels, a frock, makeup, and a wig, the 6+ foot Big Guy self-identifies as a lesbian, although she was pre-op at the time. The storyline sees her emasculated by a fat psychotic lady with a pair of hedge clippers. Bobby takes this in stride and asks the doctors not to sew the severed genitalia back on, but to treat it as the first stage in gender-reassignment surgery. Played very sympathetically, with nary a joke in sight (initial surprise on the part of Wee Hughie, who hadn't seen Bobby for several years; Bobby is referred to by male pronouns, although not when present. There is one genital mutilation gag near the end). Hypermasculine Trans Woman
  • Black Canary in DC Comics Bombshells is a trans woman. She mentions how she came out young and that her mother was supportive of her. Coming-Out Story
  • In DC Comics' Very Merry Multiverse #1, Kid Quick, the Earth-11 counterpart of Kid Flash, is non-binary. In the DC Future State future, they become the mainstream universe's Flash. Simply Trans
  • Sam from Deadman is non-binary. Berenice corrects Deadman when he calls Sam "her" by stating that "Sam uses they/them pronouns" and "They're non-binary. Not a woman or a man. Just awesome".
  • Marisa Rahm, the lead character of Milestone Comics' Deathwish miniseries, is a realistically-portrayed trans woman police detective. The series was written by Maddie Blaustein (better known as the voice of Meowth from Pokémon: The Seriesnote ), who was transgender herself.
  • Sir Ystin from Demon Knights has a nonbinary gender identity, as they explain to Exoristos.
    I was born this way. I've kept saying, whenever anyone asks. I'm not just a man or a woman. I'm both.
  • DC's Doom Patrol had a relatively short-lived trans woman character named Coagula (real name Kate Godwin). The character was created by transgender science fiction writer Rachel Pollack.
  • Dykes to Watch Out For:
    • Alison Bechdel's Dykes to Watch Out For started by introducing a trans woman character named Jillian who hung out for a few strips. Simply Trans
    • A trans man character named Jerry was introduced; Lois developed a crush on him, which later moved on to a fairly durable friendship. Simply Trans
    • Jasmine's child Jonas became more and more insistent about identifying as a girl, and eventually started living full-time, taking hormones, and identifying as Janis, with Lois's support.
  • Gender Queer: A Memoir: Maia is genderqueer and uses e/em/eir pronouns.
  • Grant Morrison's The Invisibles features a character called Lord Fanny who blurs the line of several types of transgenderism, her origin and things she says throughout the series suggesting that she has identified (or simultaneously identifies) as transsexual, transvestite, and drag queen. The contradictory nature of this may have been done on purpose, or more likely was sloppy research.
  • DTWF Follow the Leader Jane's World has Chelle's "mother", a trans man. A female trucker who fell in love with him thought she was gay after learning about it.
  • A comic original character named Blaze from Jem and the Holograms (IDW) is a trans woman. She's a musician and a huge fan of The Misfits, which results in her becoming an Ascended Fangirl after Pizzazz's larynx is injured and she's hired as a temporary lead singer. She's also Clash's, The Misfits' resident groupie, girlfriend.
  • Jo from Lumberjanes is a trans lesbian. Notable since she's a main character and this doesn't actually come out until volume 7 or 8 of the series when she's talking to a non-binary character who wants to join the Lumberjanes' all-girl summer camp.
  • The Pride features Miss Frost, a trans lesbian.
  • The Prince and the Dressmaker has Prince Sebastian, who likes to dress up in beautiful dresses but he's isn't just a cross-dresser. When discussing his gender, he says that some days his assigned gender at birth feels right but other days he feels "like a princess."
  • In "A Game of You", a Story Arc in The Sandman, the protagonist, Barbie, is friends with a trans woman named Wanda. When Wanda dies, she shows up with Death with a female form.
    Neighbor: Wanda? You've got a... thingie.
    Wanda: Don't you know it's rude to point out a lady's shortcomings?
  • Magdalene Visaggio's Sex Death Revolution is the story of Esperanza, a queer trans woman and a witch who realizes her past is being systematically rewritten. It turns out the culprit is her male half, or rather, the idealized male identity she developed back when she was still transitioning. Made separate and sentient thanks to a ritual Esperanza went through to cast out the last remnants of her old identity (making him the personification of her gender dysphoria in a sense), her male self was enraged at being cast aside and argued she owed him after 25 years. Esperanza erases him permanently, saying he was a mask she outgrew and, despite being a defense she developed, he caused her more harm than good.
  • In Thor & Loki, Loki uses Voluntary Shapeshifting to alternate between male and female forms. Odin eventually refers to Loki as "My child who is both [my son and my daughter]".
  • The Transformers (IDW): Arcee was revealed to originally have been a genderless (but functionally coded male) Transformer who was forcibly turned female against her will. Later revisions, however, tweaked this. Arcee consented to the changes and had wanted them. She went berserk not because of the trauma of the operation itself but due to the lack of aftercare.
  • The Transformers: More than Meets the Eye: Both Anode and Lug are trans women, having been assigned male when they were constructed on Cybertron. Anode had her chassis rebuilt, giving her the appearance of a Fembot with a midriff-baring design; Lug didn't feel the need, meaning that she looks like she's made entirely from boxes.
  • Wonder Woman Vol 1: While it's not made explicit due to the publishing date Hypnota was AFAB, goes by male pronouns, does not use their birth name, and lives as a man-though sometimes disguises themselves as a woman. Their sister is the only one they trusted with their past in their adult life and getting shot in the head by her gave them brain damage that led to their paranoid turn to villainy. Every subsequent writer to use the character has called them Hypnotic Woman and removed any traits that could be identified as trans.
  • In Y: The Last Man, trans men are widely accepted in the post-Gendercide world as a way of avoiding Situational Sexuality (except by the man-hating Daughters of the Amazon who are likely to kill them on sight). The eponymous protagonist is often mistaken for one at first glance, due to his situation. Presumably transgender women died when the men died because the virus specifically affected the Y chromosome, but this isn't explicitly stated. Mistaken For Trans

    Films — Live-Action 
  • The film Breakfast on Pluto, based on a novel of the same name, is all about the life of fictional Irish transgender woman Kitten Braden.
  • One of the most unlikely transformations is found in the 1970 film Myra Breckinridge, in which Myron Breckinridge (played by film critic Rex Reed, of all people) goes under the knife and becomes Myra (played by Racquel Welch).
  • Hedwig of Hedwig and the Angry Inch, a gay man who got the operation on the spur of the moment to qualify for a Citizenship Marriage with his lover. Predictably, the shady doctor screwed up, and the vulva didn't form properly, leaving him/her with nothing but a urethra, the titular "angry inch", and a scar. (In Real Life, surgeons generally invert and alter the penis, so this probably would not happen.) Hedwig spends the movie dealing with living as a trans woman, until at the end, he comes, at least in the film version, to embrace a masculine identity.
  • Transamerica is a film centering on a transgender woman, played by the cisgender Felicity Huffman.
  • The Crying Game gives us Dil, the love interest of the movie.
  • Different for Girls is the story of a post-op transgender woman meeting up with her male punk friend and protector from high school, ten years later. At first, the male friend is revolted, then accepting, then aroused in the end; they decide that they don't do too well apart, and become lovers. They are both unemployed but sell the story of their relationship to a tabloid for a sick amount of money.
  • This is the whole plot of the movie Boys Don't Cry in which a young trans man (played by Hilary Swank) uses a combination of haircut, bandages holding down his breasts, and leaving his hometown to express himself properly as a man: Brandon Teena. He even manages to have sex with a girl without her noticing sort of. Confusion might arise for some viewers as to whether or not Brandon was actually a trans man due to his own claims that he was a hermaphrodite, but he was in a women's prison at the time and trying to keep his secret from the woman he loved, so this was pretty obviously a lie. Especially when taking into account the shower scene after his violent and traumatic rape.
  • Bernadette in Priscilla, Queen of the Desert is a trans woman (rather than a Drag Queen like her two companions). One guaranteed way to make her angry is to call her "Ralph"...
  • Judy Squires in Better Than Chocolate. She's also a singer at a local lesbian nightclub, and gets a rather tart musical number explaining the differences between drag queens and trans women.
  • Ace Ventura: Pet Detective features one of the less flattering parodies of The Crying Game, revealing that the villain is actually Lt. Lois Einhorn, who this whole time was really the missing football player Ray Finkle, having gone through complete transition (but remaining non-op), adopted the identity of a missing hiker, and became a police lieutenant, seemingly all in the sake of the perfect disguise. Roger Podacter, who was attracted to her, discovered this, finding "Captain Winkie" during a romantic encounter with her and getting murdered for it.
  • Tom from The Cement Garden is a boy who would rather be a girl, although it's unclear if he's actually trans or just thinks he wouldn't get bullied if he were a girl. In any case, his sisters eventually give him a makeover, and his best friend William takes on a new interest in him.
  • Noxeema from To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything! Julie Newmar gives Chi-Chi a rundown of genderqueer types, doubling as a "The Reason You Suck" Speech.note 
    Noxeema: When a straight man puts on a dress to get his sexual kicks, he is a transvestite. When a man is a woman trapped in a man's body and has the little operation, he is a transsexual. When a gay man has waaay too much fashion sense for one gender, he is a Drag Queen. And when a tired little Latin boy puts on a dress, he is simply a boy in a dress.
  • Open, an independent film by Jake Yuzna showed a positive same-gender relationship between a gay male pair: one cisgender, one transgender.
  • Elvis & Madonna, a Brazilian film, is a positive depiction of a cisgender lesbian and a bisexual trans woman falling in love.
  • The Thai film Beautiful Boxer is a biopic about the famous trans woman and former Muay Thai boxer, Nong Thoom. Thailand is known for its "kathoey", literally "third gender".
  • Played for Laughs with Stan/Loretta from Monty Python's Life of Brian, although to the credit of her friends, after the initial joking they accept her decision.
  • There's a German film called Romeos where a gay trans man falls for a cis gay friend.
  • Ma Vie En Rose, the movie Tomboy is a Spiritual Successor to, is about a young boy named Ludo who identifies as a girl. The end of the movie implies that the child of Ludo's family's new neighbors, Chris/Christine, may be trans as well. She at least seems to identify primarily with masculine traits.
  • The World According to Garp features John Lithgow as Roberta Muldoon. Not enough context
  • German movie Zettl (Spiritual Successor to Kir Royal) has the mayor of Berlin as this. Might be a parody of the Real Life gay mayor, one of the first openly gay ones. Completely with a billionaire who has a thing for pre-op transgender people. And is pissed off when she finally does the operation (in the Cuban embassy, of all places) since this makes her "a totally ordinary woman!"
  • Sam from Gutterballs. After being killed, BBK adds insult to injury by bisecting her penis to create a "mangina".
  • Come Back To the Five and Dime, Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean, the James Dean fan club reunion is joined by a stranger, Joanne, played by Karen Black, who turns out to have been better known to the rest of the club 20 years ago as Joe. Oh, and it wasn't James Dean who fathered the club president's son. Old Friend, New Gender
  • The Chilean film Naomi Campbel is about the life of Yermen, a trans woman who enters a Reality Show to get the chance to finish her reassignment therapy.
  • 3 Generations was initially presented as a trans boy's Coming of Age Story, but after the transgender community criticized the movie for having a cis actress play a trans boy and having no trans people at all in the production, the director backpedaled and defended her decision by saying the movie is actually about "a girl who is presenting in a very ineffectual way as a boy [...] to actually use a trans boy was not an option because this isn’t what my story is about", which is all sorts of unfortunate implications and ended up further angering trans people. Early in its production history, it was also known as About Ray. There's no indication within the film itself of Ray being anything other than transgender, as the idea of him being a lesbian girl is specifically rejected, he identifies as a boy repeatedly, Ray's desire is to medically transition, etc.
  • Joan Lambert from Alien was assigned male at birth and transitioned, according to bonus material in the Alien Anthology Blu-Ray set. The specifics of trans people in the alien universe aren't elaborated on, aside from that she has no lasting trauma, suggesting that being trans isn't unusual.
  • Racing Daylight has an incredible amount of genderfuck so the audience can draw its own conclusions. The gossip (played by actress Denny Dillon) may be a transgender man. In his previous life, he was the prissy Religious Wife, Henrietta, but Anna said everyone knew Henrietta was a man. The Busy-Body (played by John Seidman) is either a drag queen or a trans woman, and in the past was Henrietta's husband Rev. "Troll-Man" Potts. The vagueness here reads more like Trans Audience Interpretation.
  • Escape from L.A. reveals that Hershe Las Palmas is, in fact, a trans woman and an old associate of Snake's originally named "Carjack" Malone. Old Friend, New Gender
  • The Danish Girl depicted the story of trans woman Lili Elbe, an artist in 1920s Denmark who was one of the first known recipients of sex reassignment surgery.
  • Zus & Zo: About halfway through the movie, Nino says "I don't like my body" and shortly thereafter comes out as transgender. This complicates his upcoming Marriage of Convenience to a woman, Bo (by the terms of his father's will he has to get married to inherit a $1.9 million hotel). Mid Story Gender Change
  • Normal (2003) is about a middle-aged trans woman named Ruth who comes out to her family after 25 years of marriage. Coming-Out Story, Mid Story Gender Change?
  • By Hook or By Crook, an independent "queer buddy movie" associated with the New Queer Cinema movement, is a rare case of a film written by, directed by, and starring trans people. Both of the main characters, Shy and Val, are played by trans people (Silas Howard and Harry Dodge, respectively), and although the words "trans" or "transgender" are not used in the film, their characters use "he/him" pronouns and words like "guy" and "man" to refer to each other but are typically perceived as women by the straight world (and unfortunately, by many reviewers of the film as well).
  • Princess Cyd: Discussed. Cyd mentions Katie was mistaken for male, and Miranda suggests maybe she is. This doesn't seem to be the case, but they're completely comfortable with the idea. Lady Looks Like a Dude, maybe Mistaken For Trans?
  • Sorceress: Mara and Mira could be considered this since having been raised male they truly identify that way at first. Apparently the opposite idea never even occurred to them, or was brought up by any other person until they met Baldar and Erlick. They're even oblivious to the physical differences of the sexes. Even by the end of the film, it's not really clear that either of them grasped it, and they both may still identify themselves as male.
  • They/Them (2020): The protagonist, Ash, is nonbinary. The film follows them as they try to come to terms with their gender, on top of experiencing transphobic bullying while doing so.
  • Bit: Laurel is a trans woman. Oddly enough, the words trans and transgender aren't ever spoken in the film, although they're part of its description. That being said, vampires simply know by their Super-Senses, so this never needs saying. When Vlad meets Laurel, however, he simply comments on the fact her inclusion is something new even for Duke.
  • The Craft: Legacy: Lourdes is introduced as a trans woman. The others tread carefully around the subject of having babies and periods since she can't experience either, but she's rather non-dysphoric about it. As she says "Trans girls have their own magic."
  • Space Sweepers combines this with Become a Real Boy(er, girl in this case) in the form of Bubs. As a robot, Bubs technically doesn’t have a gender in the first place, but at one point is seen longingly looking at women in facial reconstruction advertisements. When Kot-nim calls her a big sister, her cheeks literally light up under her faceplate. At the end of the film, she gets her body rebuilt into a feminine, human-looking form and has plans on changing her voice to match.

    Live-Action TV 
  • In Difficult People, recurring and later series regular Lola, is trans. This isn't the focus of her character, however. Her main trait is actually being a 9/11 Truther. She's played by trans actress Shakina Nayfack.
  • Very much Played for Laughs by Barbara Dixon, the grotesque taxi-driver of Royston Vasey in The League of Gentlemen.
  • Nip/Tuck seems to have a bit of a fascination with transgender people (understandably, as the show is largely concerned with sex and plastic surgery); the most notable of these is Ava Moore (played by Famke Janssen), whom the main character Christian calls "the goddamn Hope Diamond of transsexuals." They actually track down the surgeon responsible for Ava's near-flawless transformation, who agreed to do it because he was heterosexual and she was gay and in love with him.
  • The Education of Max Bickford had a reasonably realistic transgender character (well played by Helen Shaver), who was an old school chum of Max's.
  • Coronation Street had a realistic and extremely sympathetic transgender woman, now written out as dead from cancer, marrying another long-time regular character.
  • All My Children introduced a transgender character in the process of transitioning, in a relationship with a lesbian.
  • The City (a reworking of the Soap Opera Loving, was the first Soap Opera to tackle this topic, with the gorgeous model Azure C. being revealed to have been born a man. Unfortunately, the negative fan reaction and the actress' poor performance nixed the storyline. The character and her boyfriend were given a happy ending however, Riding into the Sunset after he accepted this.
  • The L Word has had a drag king as a recurring character, and a transgender man as a member of the main cast.
  • Ugly Betty has Alexis Meade, who lives as a woman after faking her death. Of course, her brother didn't know until after he starts hitting on her. In a later episode in which Daniel is displeased by his long-lost half-brother:
    Daniel: Don't call him my brother. My only brother is my sister, Alexis.
  • One of the reasons why the Argentinian telenovela Los Roldán was so successful? The fun-loving transgender character played by actress Florencia de la V, who is a trans woman in real life.
  • Two and a Half Men:
    • In season 1, Evelyn's new boyfriend turns out to be one of Charlie's old girlfriends. Cue the torrent of puerile jokes.
    • In season 11, Alan dates a trans woman briefly. Her treatment is fairly sensitive, save a few jabs in the form of "masculine" behavior (paying for him on a date, giving him her jacket, punching an obnoxious man being mean to him, and scratching her ‘phantom nuts’), which Alan doesn’t mind or even enjoys. In a twist, their relationship ends when she gets back together with her ex-wife, at Alan’s surprisingly selfless encouragement (although he does get a kick of watching them reconcile).
  • Tales from the Crypt:
    • "The Assassin" has a team of government assassins invade the home of a very stereotypical suburban housewife because they're convinced her husband is a rogue former agent who used Magic Plastic Surgery to radically alter his appearance before going underground. Nothing she says can convince them otherwise so she turns the tables on them and easily kills them all. It turns out she was their rogue former agent after quite a bit more plastic surgery than even they had been prepared to believe.
    Female Agent: Does he still like it rough?
    Housewife: Yes, as a matter of fact, I do.
  • The victim in one episode of Bones turns out to be a postoperative transgender woman. This is handled with surprising sensitivity, and despite the title of the episode that status is not the focus of the plot.
  • Drop Dead Diva has two cases involving trans people, one, a widow played by transgender actress Candis Cayne is trying to keep her marital assets from being taken away by her wife’s parents. The other a boy takes on his private school when the head of the board insists he use the girls' bathroom.
  • An episode of Night Court had an old university friend of Dan Fielding show up as a post-op transgender woman, in the process of getting married; with Dan naturally playing the role of rabid homo/transphobe. Dan eventually accepted his friend.
  • Doctor Who:
    • Cassandra from "The End Of The World" and "New Earth" makes passing mention of when she was a boy. She's also thousands of years old and had so much plastic surgery that she's now only a face on a very thin layer of skin until she begins to possess Rose's body.
      Cassandra: Soon, the sun will blossom into a red giant, and my home will die. That's where I used to live, when I was a little boy, down there.
    • "A Town Called Mercy" features a transgender horse. His name is Susan and he would like you to respect his life choices.
    • Many Time Lords apparently, given that regeneration makes for Easy Sex Change. The first one mentioned in the new series is the Corsair ("Didn't feel like himself unless he had that tattoo — or herself a few times."), and the first one seen is Missy, previously known as the Master. The Doctor gets in on this as well, with the Thirteenth Doctor being their first female incarnation. How they deal with it varies; Missy and the Doctor both embrace it pretty casually but recurring character the General hated being a man and was glad when she got to regenerate back into a woman.
  • Mark in Ally McBeal found out that his girlfriend (played by the lovely Lisa Edelstein) was a pre-op trans woman. They tried to make it work anyway, but he was just too freaked out.
  • In an episode of St. Elsewhere, one of Dr. Craig's old pals shows up at the hospital. All goes well until he happens to mention that he's having sexual reassignment surgery. After having a trademark freakout for most of the episode, Craig finally accepts the situation.
  • One episode of Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles features Sarah searching for a man on the run from Skynet, only to find out he's been hiding his identity by living as a woman. None of this is played for laughs, and with zero amount of freaking out or any talk about sex. Alan/Eileen later admits to being strangely grateful for the opportunity to live as her true self, despite being hunted.
  • In one episode of Rab C. Nesbitt a new barmaid at Rab's local pub is a pre-op trans woman (played by David Tennant, no less!). At the end of the episode, she helps Rab and Mary to get revenge on Mary's extremely sleazy new boss (who has been sexually harassing her from her first day in the job) by taking Mary's place at work one day and seducing him in the broom cupboard, leading to a spectacularly horrified reaction.
  • Law & Order: Special Victims Unit:
    • In one episode, the Victim of the Week, Cheryl (played by Kate Moennig), is on trial for beating a man to death. As the investigation continues, it's discovered that she is a pre-op transgender woman, and she acted in self-defense. Long story short, she was put in a men's prison, and after her trial, she is gang-raped.
    • "Transitions" involved a pre-teen trans girl whose father refuses to let her start hormone therapy and transition. The episode treats the young girl quite sensitively, with most characters accepting and using her preferred pronouns and her father eventually coming around (even after being brutally attacked.)
    • Another episode revealed an involuntary trans person. Preteen twins, a boy and a girl, were the main suspects in the accidental death of a gang member. The DNA evidence seemed to point to the boy twin even though his sister had admitted she was the culprit until they learned the girl twin was actually born a boy. When he was born, he'd been mutilated by accident during his circumcision, so his parents forced him into transitioning genders when he was still a baby to avoid being an outcast because of what happened. When he's finally told that he was born a boy, he states that he never felt right with his body, and starts the transition back into a male identity. This was based on a true story (sadly, it ended tragically, since he later killed himself).
    • A 2015 episode was about a transgender teenager who was mocked by other teens and was accidentally thrown off a bridge. She survived the injuries but suddenly died due to them later. The episode dealt with whether it was a hate crime or not.
    • A 2016 episode billed as a Very Special Episode involved a trans woman who was raped and beaten in a bathroom. The investigators had to find out whether it counted as a hate crime or not. It turns out to be music related as her boyfriend, who she is in a Secret Relationship with due to fears of being seen as gay, is a rapper. When she dies her boyfriend murders the man who killed her and ends up going to jail due to refusing to reveal his romance in court.
  • CSI: An episode features a well-intentioned doctor who did back-alley sex-change operations.
  • A similar case happens in CSI: NY, where a trans woman (who was still transitioning) is found dead in the men's restroom of a very posh hotel that happened to have been running a political rally in one room and a party in the other, which she'd been performing at. The initial suspect was a governor who had raped the woman's sister, but the murderer was actually a man who she'd flirted with to get in and confront the governer, who flew into a rage when his friends made fun of him (since they'd seen her performing at the party in the opposite room).
  • Two episodes of NCIS had transgender characters. One became a running joke after Tony made out with her. The other was a character who was dead by the time the episode really began (suicide) and was dealt with a lot better, even if there was the obligatory "he... she... he-she" moment.
  • An episode of The Listener, "Lisa Says," had a trans man character.
  • On Will & Grace Jack (a gay man) finds himself sexually aroused by a female stripper giving him a lap dance and starts to question his existence, but is relieved to find out that she is a pre-op transgender woman and he was just aroused by the feeling of her penis. How that works we have no idea.
  • Adam in Degrassi: The Next Generation is introduced as a New Transfer Student, and we find out that’s he’s trans at the same time as everyone in the school does when he’s outed. His grandmother still doesn't know. As a bonus, the character also has the title of the first fictional teenage transgender character in the history of scripted television. However Trailers Always Spoil, this was heavily hinted in the promo for Season 10 to be the case. Adam was eventually Killed Off for Real for an aesop about texting and driving.
    • Degrassi Next Class introduces Yael, a teenager who finally comes to terms with their gender identity and they identify as non-binary.
  • In the French-Canadian series Un Gars Une Fille, Guy and Sylvie participate in a gay pride parade alongside Guy's lesbian half-sister. There, they encounter an old high school hockey teammate of Guy's, who has transitioned into a woman. A humorous line happens when Sylvie asks her if it was a difficult process.
    "Yes it was, and it took a lot of balls... which I no longer have!"
  • Jasmine/Jason of Holly Oaks is a trans man who gets framed for murder by a Psycho Lesbian so he has to carry on living as a girl. It's... complicated.
  • Cold Case:
    • The victim in "Boy Crazy" is diagnosed with "gender identity disorder" (the older term for gender dysphoria, from when being trans was pathologized and considered synonymous with it), and winds up being murdered for presenting as a boy.
    • The earlier episode "Daniela" focused on a trans woman in the '70s who is Driven to Suicide when her boyfriend's father forced them to break up.
  • An episode of ER called "Next Of Kin" stars a child named Morgan. The episode doesn't end well, since she's forced to live like a boy after moving in with her mom when her dad dies; apparently due to the fact her step-dad would not accept her as a girl.
  • One of the dozens of subplots in Dirty Sexy Money revolves around Patrick Darling's relationship with a post-op transgender woman named Carmelita, which he attempts to maintain despite (a) being married to someone else and (b) running for the U.S. Senate.
  • One episode of Dark Angel has Jam Pony's resident square Normal get into a relationship with a trans woman. When he finds out, he's still quite willing to go out with her, but she dumps him and expresses interest in resident lesbian Original Cindy, who is repulsed.
  • Ms. Hudson from Elementary. Interestingly, little has been made of it — she hasn't been treated differently, joked about, or anything really. She is also played by a trans woman.
  • Nao, a character introduced in season 6, from 3-Nen B-Gumi Kinpachi-sensei was revealed to be trans. He was introduced as an antisocial, somewhat aggressive New Transfer Student who wears a long skirt instead of the standard mini-skirt. He's considered an influential character in Japan when it comes to transgender characters.
  • Tony, introduced in episode 2.08 of Orphan Black, was assigned female at birth but identifies as male and has begun transitioning.
  • Sophia Burset in Orange Is the New Black, who's in prison because when she was a firefighter she stole credit cards and financial information from burnt houses, to pay for hormones and surgery. Despite being a secondary character the show attracted wide praise for having one of the most sympathetic portrayals of a trans woman in film or television history, and her actress Laverne Cox (a trans woman in real life) has used the publicity to further her campaigns for the rights of transgender people.
  • In a 2013 weekly-aired Chilean Reality Show about plastic surgery, one of the participants was a trans woman named Alejandra who entered it hoping to get the reassignment surgery. She won that round and was successfully operated on.
  • In 2008, 5-time Jeopardy! champion Fred Ramen from 1997 underwent gender reassignment surgery, becoming Catherine Ramen, Jeopardy's first transgender champion. She was considered for a fan-voted spot in the 90s-champions quarterfinal matches in 2014's "Battle of the Decades" tournament but lost to 1996 College Tournament winner Shane Whitlock.
  • Nomi from Sense8 is a transgender hacker. Her gender identity plays an important role in her story but doesn't dominate it. Her relationship with her girlfriend, and skill with computers, is as essential to her story as her gender. Considering that the directors, Lana and Lilly Wachowski, are transgender women themselves, the positive treatment of her character isn't too surprising. Her actress, Jamie Clayton, is also transgender.
  • Two similarly-named reality TV shows launched in 2015 focusing on transgender people: I Am Cait, following the very public transition of Caitlyn Jenner, and I Am Jazz, which follows a pre-teen trans girl as she enters into adolescence.
  • On My Name Is Earl, Earl signs up for a pen-pal service while in prison and gets matched up with a woman named Annie. When Annie appears, she is...not quite what Earl was expecting, but she manages to have a nice conversation with him all the same. They connect when Earl mentions that this whole "Karma" thing must be confusing, and she responds that people have been calling her "confusing" her whole life. She talks about how she's planning to complete her transition with bottom-surgery and allows Earl to feel her breast implants, as "the top half is already done." Earl is impressed with how realistic they feel. Later, another inmate is seen going in for a conjugal visit with Annie.
  • Glee gave us two trans characters: Unique (transfemme) and Coach Beiste (transmasculine). Unique was presented as trans from the start and was immensely popular with fans, who often felt she was underused during the fourth and fifth seasons. Beiste, on the other hand, was introduced as a cisgender woman in the second season who later came out as a trans man in the sixth. This wasn't nearly as well-received since Beiste was already popular with the genderqueer crowd for being a masculine cis/straight woman, and giving the message that just because she wasn't super-feminine didn't make her any less of a woman. As you can imagine, many viewers were upset by the revelation that Beiste secretly identified as a man all along.
  • Dead of Summer gives us Drew (FTM), formerly known as Andrea. His mother was deeply disturbed by his identity and eventually left him because of it.
  • Taylor Mason from Billions is non-binary, going by they/them pronouns.
  • The Switch is a Canadian show about a trans woman who features a nonbinary character. Chris uses "zie/zir" pronouns.
  • Butterfly is all about 11-year-old Max transitioning into a girl called Maxine. Sobriquet Sex Switch
  • An episode of 3rd Rock from the Sun plays it surprisingly straight (no pun intended) and gently. As the family gathers for their end-of-day rooftop debriefing, Sally ponders her experience with a gay man who mistook her for a transvestite. "Remember when we said that two sexes must be so limiting? I think Glenn found a loophole." Sally herself was male on their homeworld as well, assigned a female disguise for their mission on Earth. She gets used to the idea a lot faster than Tommy, who is Really 700 Years Old, does as being a teenager. Could be Trans Audience Interpretation mixed with Mistaken For Trans
  • Proven Innocent: In "The Struggle for Stonewall", Madeline and Easy take up the case of Cindy Whitman, a trans woman convicted of murdering a trans woman activist.
  • Good Girls: Annie's child Ben, who originally went by Sadie, comes out as a trans boy late in the second season, in a heartwarming scene where Annie's just informed him of his half-sibling's birth.
    Annie: It's a boy. [She turns to leave.]
    Sadie: Mom? [Pause.] So am I.
    [A pause as Annie registers, before she tears up, smiles, and sits down next to him on the bed, giving him a big hug.]
    • Isaiah Stannard, who plays Ben, is also transgender.
  • In Tales of the City (2019), there is Anna Madrigal, reprised by Olympia Dukakis, who played her in the HBO miniseries.
  • Euphoria: Trans Work.
    • The series makes no secret of the fact that Jules is a trans girl. One of her very first scenes shows her giving herself a hormone shot.
    • "03 Bonnie and Clyde" introduces Minako, who is either genderfluid or non-binary.
    • "Trials and Tribulations" introduces TC, a friend of Jules who appears to be either a trans man or non-binary.
  • When They See Us: Korey's older sister Marci, who's shown before and after transitioning.
  • The Boys (2019): Doppleganger, a shapeshifter, is genderfluid, going by they/them pronouns. Fittingly, they're able to go from female to male form at will.
  • Strange Empire: Morgan Finn. Though not explicitly stated, it's pretty clear this is his identity, rather than simply being a crossdressing woman, given the lengths which he goes to. Naturally though as the concept of being transgender is pretty unknown, mostly he's viewed as that. Thankfully, he has a very understanding uncle who helps him out.
  • Supergirl (2015): Nia Nal, aka Dreamer, is a trans woman. This is actually a major plot point, given that she descends from an alien race with dream-based superpowers that only manifest in women once per generation, and at first everyone assumed that her sister, who is a cisgender woman, would be the one to inherit them. This also has some Reality Subtext since her actress, Nicole Maines, is also transgender.
  • Emerald City: Tip, due to being kept a boy by magic so long, doesn't identify as female when he's changed back into his original form. He reluctantly stays in female form to assume the role of Princess Ozma though. Thankfully, East's magic lets him shift back and forth between forms at will.
  • Dispatches From Elsewhere: In the second episode, we see that Simone is a trans woman. She approaches a Pride parade where some other trans women are gathered but backs away from participating for unknown reasons. Her own flashbacks as well show her before transitioning and coming out to her parents (they didn't look happy). Simone is played by transgender actor Eve Lindley.
  • Party of Five (2020): Matthew's paranoia about applying for DACA status stems from the fact that he is a trans man and doesn't want to show anyone his birth certificate.
  • Control Z: Isabela is a young trans woman, who'd been keeping this a secret due to fear of other people's reaction.
  • Just Shoot Me!:
    • Dennis' childhood friend Bert who moved to Colorado when they were 12 came back into Dennis' life as an adult in Season 5 named Brandi and was played by Jenny McCarthy. Dennis found it difficult at first to accept her but after talking to Maya, it was like old times. Until Dennis tried to make a move and Brandi makes it clear that they're Like Brother and Sister. Dennis wasn't sure at first how to handle the attraction, but he accepted how he felt.
    • The drag queen Robert in "The Goodbye Girl" mentions planning on having a sex reassignment.
  • The Baby-Sitters Club (2020): Mary Anne's baby-sitting charge Bailey is a transgender girl. Mary Anne doesn't realize the girl is trans until the end of their first baby-sitting session when she notices all the "old clothes" in Bailey's closet are boyish attire while all the "new clothes" in the drawers are mostly dresses. She's initially confused but understands better once Dawn explains to her how people want their "outsides" to match their "insides" and that denying Bailey her girly interests is like being forced to use your non-dominant hand. When Mary Anne accompanies Bailey to the hospital, she tells off the doctor and nurse for accidentally misgendering her.
  • Lovecraft Country: Christina may be a lesbian or bi woman, though a straight trans man is another possibility, given the frequent transformations into a male form she or he does to be with Ruby.
  • We Are Who We Are: Discussed by Fraser and Caitlin, as he explains what being transgender is to her. She also later is exploring her identity, leaning toward trans boy.
  • Transplant: In "Trigger Warning" one patient is a teenage trans boy, who wants to have top surgery (i.e. a double mastectomy), while his parents aren't on board with it (and since he's under eighteen, their consent's required). His parents do agree to have him be seen at a gender clinic about going on puberty blockers though by the end.
  • Royal Pains: Anna, a teen trans girl in "The Prince of Nucleotides" who's sick due to self-medicating with estrogen, which triggers a condition that she has.
  • Big Sky: Jerrie, a sex worker Ronald kidnaps, is a young trans woman.
  • Another Life (2019): Although not explicitly stated yet, Zayn is meant to be nonbinary like the actor, with an ambiguous gender presentation. No one ever addresses Zayn by any pronouns, interestingly enough.
  • Twin Peaks: Dale Cooper calls in his old partner, Dennis Bryson, to help investigate the drug charges against him. Since their last assignment together, Dennis has come out as a trans woman named "Denise".
  • Star Trek: Discovery: In "Sanctuary" Adira Tal formally follows up on the show's promotional materials saying they're non-binary, shifting to "they/them" pronouns. The crew, in grand Star Trek tradition, accept it without comment.
  • Chilling Adventures of Sabrina: Theo, although introduced as a girl with the name Susie at the beginning of season 1, is gradually hinted as being uncomfortable with that identity. He transitions and adopts his new name at the beginning of season 2, in honor of his ancestor Dorothea.
  • Feel Good:
    • Mae realizes she's nonbinary in episode 5. If one is already familiar with the real Mae Martin, this won't be a surprise, since this is her actual gender.note 
    • It's also mentioned that two of George's students are trans, though she had no idea.
  • The Nevers: Jack Nimble is transgender, via Word of Saint Paul, with his actor Vinnie Heaven posting to his Instagram that Nimble is "the androgynous trans character that I’ve waited my career to meet".

    Music 
  • The lead singer and guitarist for the band ''Against Me!'' is trans woman Laura Jane Grace. The band's discography includes several songs addressing or centered around the difficulties of being transgender, the most obvious of which is entitled "Transgender Dysphoria Blues". Interestingly, their first song to address the idea of being transgender was "The Ocean", released 7 years before Laura would officially come out and start to transition- at the start of the second verse, she sings "and if I could have chosen, I would have been born a woman", and goes on to mention her mother would have named her Laura if she had been born female. No one really got the significance until later.
  • The most common interpretation of the song "For Today I Am A Boy" by Antony & The Johnsons is that it's about a transgender person. The songs "You Are My Sister" and "I Fell In Love With A Dead Boy" have the same interpretations.
  • Avicii's "Silhouettes" video involves a trans woman undergoing sex reassignment surgery.
  • Dolly Parton's "Travelin' Thru" was written with the process of transition in mind. It is played at the credits of the movie Transamerica.
  • Jake Edwards' "Second Puberty" is about starting testosterone in your 20s.
  • "Confused Gender" by Ravens Moreland is "a song about a transsexual before it was cool".
  • She/her/hers has a lot of trans related songs, such as "Gender Is Boring".
  • Suzanne Vega song "As Girls Go" is about a trans woman.
  • The Velvet Underground's "Lady Godiva's Operation," focusing on a trans woman first going under the knife. Things don't really work out.
  • Stolen City's music video for "Faces" is about a transgender girl becoming a model and her father defending her from a set of bullies. A few viewers didn't actually realise the subject matter until Word of Gay from actress Jamie O'Herlihy (who is trans herself).
  • Teniwoha's Vocaloid song "Villain" approaches a lot of transgender themes. The singer pretends to be a boy in public but asks, "a stamen and stamen won't get anywhere?", and the singer's representative in its music video bounces between presenting as a flashy villain in a masculine gakuran and an androgynous youth in a hoodie.

    Podcasts 
  • In the D&D actual-play podcast The Adventure Zone there's Lup, an NPC who is Taako's twin sister and is revealed to be trans by Griffin, the DM, during her introduction.
  • In Sequinox, Harmony's father Charles is a trans man. In the Gemini arc, Chell states that she's a trans woman, though it wasn't a reveal so much as stating an open secret.

    Professional Wrestling 
  • CHIKARA had Edith Surreal, the reigning CHIKARA Young Lions Cup Champion, who identifies as non-binary, preferring she/her pronouns, and she is the first openly non-binary champion in wrestling history.
  • Nyla Rose is the first transgender wrestler in All Elite Wrestling.
  • Mariah Moreno competes under the name "The Bloodthirsty Vixen" Amanda, and in 2011 became the first transgender Women's Champion with WILD Wrestling. A storyline was started where Amanda defeated then-champion Lucky O'Shea but was disqualified from winning the title when her history was revealed. After making her case to the board, she was granted a rematch. Trans Tribulations, maybe a trope about gender/sex biases in sports?

    Tabletop Games 
  • Dungeons & Dragons has embraced transgender and gender-nonconforming characters in its fifth edition, with a sidebar encouraging players to explore different options of gender expression and identity when creating a new character. Waterdeep: Dragon Heist feature both a non-binary elf and a trans masculine drow, and Mordenkainen's Tome of Foes mentions that some elves (including Drow) are born with an innate ability to change gender, which is viewed as a blessing from their god (High and wood-elves do. Drow think it's weird). Trans Option
  • Exalted has three examples. The Tya are women in the West who, after getting intricate tattoos and drinking a tonic that sterilizes them, are legally considered males, and can sail without fear of Storm Mothers, who destroy any ship that has a woman more beautiful than them, which includes pretty much any woman. The Dereth are Delzhan who wear a special gray sash and are legally and culturally recognized as the opposite gender. The Lunar Exalt Silver Python is agender; as a form of homage to Luna, who's associated with gender fluidity, zhe regularly switches genders every twenty years, and no longer remembers or cares which zhe started out as.
    • It gets more explicit in Third Edition, with the note that any trans Lunar will instantly switch to their idealized gender upon receiving their Exaltation.
  • Nur, the prophet of Malachism in Ironclaw is non-binary. There are some Malachite sects that propose theories about their assigned-at-birth gender, but the mainstream religion views this as disrespectful in the extreme.
  • Magic: The Gathering has Alesha Who Smiles At Death as a canonically transgender character. And a pretty badass one, at that, who comes out in her Rite of Passage after singlehandedly killing a dragon. There are also a couple of nonbinary characters: the minor character Hallar the Firefletcher from Dominaria, and the planeswalker Niko Aris, who is one of the few nonbinary characters to have facial hair.
  • Pathfinder:
    • Pathfinder, due to not being hampered by the "decency codes" that constrained earlier editions of Dungeons & Dragons, freely embraces a more adult stance on things and so openly includes homosexuality and trans people in its setting, something that has given the game a notable LGBT Fanbase. Transgender and gender-neutral characters are quite common through the gamebooks, including such figures as the androgynous angelic Empyreal Lordnote  Arshea, whose portfolio covers freedom, physical beauty, and sexuality, and whose gender ambiguity means that individuals, regardless of gender or personal sexuality, find Arshea to be ravishingly beautiful and sexually enticing.
    • More explicit examples include an NPC named Anevia Tirabade (who willingly went undercover as a girl in her youth, figured out in the process that she actually was one, and was eventually given an early version of the serum of sex shift from Starfinder as a wedding present from her future bride; another NPC named Marislova (who, while living in her ex-girlfriend's nearly all-female sanctuary, gradually discovered that she actually fit in); iconic shaman Shardra Geltl (who used an alchemical treatment in order to conform), and two male side characters named Xomar Glavit (a dwarven oracle) and Rexus Vicotora (a sorcerer and heir to a largely-defunct noble house). The name of the Rivethun faction (with whom Shardra and Xomar are both at least tangentially associated) has become almost synonymous in-universe with being either trans or a staunch ally.
    • Second edition continues the trend, with the Gancanagh (one of a race of chaotic good angels called Azata) explicitly being motivated to defend trans and gender non-conforming individuals (sometimes to the point of serving as a Karmic Trickster towards bigots).
  • Shadowrun's setting has fully embraced trans rights to the point that there are cybernetic mods in sourcebooks specifically for transgender characters as well as rules for changing a character's sex via gene therapy (a longer process but causes less essence drain). Two of the NPC commentators in Jackpoint are transgender, as well- the Conspiracy Theorist Cloud 9 who regularly changes sex due to a surgical addiction (but always identifies as male regardless), and Hard Exit, who changes sex so often that other characters have to ask which gender pronouns are appropriate at the moment.
  • Starfinder officially introduces both the serum of sex shift and the explicitly non-binary iconic operative Iseph.
  • The World of Warcraft Tabletop RPG touches on this, by explaining how quilboar — a race of warthog-like humanoids, who are Always Chaotic Evil in the MMO but are given a somewhat more sympathetic portrayal in the tabletop game — operate under a strict Stay in the Kitchen rule, but if a female proves herself to be a strong and capable warrior, then she is declared to be a male by the tribe's shaman, and will live as a male and even take wives from that point forward.

    Theater 

    Video Games 
  • Madeline in Celeste is clearly hinted in-game to be a transgender woman in multiple places, although her being trans was disputed until developer Maddy Thorson confirmed outright it after themself coming out as trans (noting that, as trans fans suspected, it wasn't even supposed to be ambiguous). Simply Trans. Possibly a Trans Work?
  • Persona:
    • In Persona 3 during "Operation Babe Hunt", Junpei, Akihiko, and the protagonist are victims of an Unsettling Gender-Reveal when the only woman who actually is interested in you three seems rather suspiciously eager and vulgar minded. The reveal is when Akihiko realizes she has some hair on her chin and she outs herself, disappointed that you figured out her secret, and that she wanted you guys as "boytoys" anyway.
    • Subverted in Persona 4. Naoto Shirogane appears to be this at first, given her Shadow's actions and intentions, but it turns out she is a cis girl who is trying desperately to be accepted in the very male-dominated line of work she's in, rather than being seen as Just a Kid. All of her detective heroes as a kid were male, and all of her co-workers are male, so she viewed those as role models, and aspired to be just like them, unfortunately causing her to mistakenly believe she had to make herself actually pass as a male to be taken seriously.
    • Barkeep Lala Escargot from Persona 5 may initially come off as just a Drag Queen, but she's implied to genuinely identify as a woman.
  • Poison and Roxy from Final Fight, both trans women (and Palette Swaps of each other). They didn't make it stateside in the console versions, though (thank you very much, Nintendo Standards and Practices). Poison doesn't reappear until Final Fight Revenge, and from that point forward she sticks around as Hugo Andore's manager/bodyguard/bickering best friend. Capcom of Japan have gone on record that Poison's status is post-op in America and pre-op in Japan, though originally she was a hermaphrodite with a general feminine body-structure and masculine sexual organs. Reflecting this, the scanner on the Shadaloo stage in Street Fighter V lists Poison's gender as "Unknown".
  • The Frozen Half, an ice magician described similarly to Poison in Castlevania: Symphony of the Night. The Dracula X Chronicles rerelease changed the term to "transvestite". In both games, the enemy is described as serving Galamoth, and it indeed first appeared in Kid Dracula, though wearing ice skates and looking Gonk.
  • Super Mario Bros.: Birdo was described in the manual of her first appearance as "wanting to be called Birdetta" and "wanting to be a girl". She's presented as female in every appearance afterwards, but she's usually fine with being called "Birdo".
  • Vivian from Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door is a transgender girl in the original Japanese version. Her sister Beldam is the only one who specifically uses this to insult her, but every other character (including the narrator) refers to her in masculine terms. Only the English and German localizations remove this trait, treating her as a cisgender girl and having Beldam's insults instead be about how ugly she is.
  • Dept. Heaven:
    • Lethal Joke Character Eater from Blaze Union has two personalities, one of which is male. Eater is AFAB, but when the male half is in control, he is treated by all other characters and by the game system itself (which has different unit formations based on gender) as a man who just so happens to be running around in the girly clothes his other personality put on in the morning.
    • Gloria Union has Kyra, who identifies (and is treated by the game's system itself) as intergender.
  • Erica, formerly Eric in Catherine. Notably, The Reveal is not treated as anything especially dramatic - it's mentioned rather nonchalantly in the Lovers True Ending, Toby is happily in a relationship with her (or at least one with a lot of mutual snarking), and Vincent, Johnny, and Orlando knew all along as they went to high school with her. In hindsight, there's a lot of foreshadowing for it.
  • Dragon Age:
    • Played for laughs in Dragon Age: Origins and slightly less in Dragon Age II. In the former, at the Pearl, the PC has the option of saying "surprise me" and getting a very obviously male dwarf prostitute in a female costume. In the latter, at the Blooming Rose, the transgender elven prostitute at least has a female body model even if her voice is male.
      Husky Dwarf: I've got a little something for everybody.
    • There were transgender elven prostitutes in Origins as well, with such lines as "You have to slay the dragon before you can get to the princess". Also, the "surprise me" option can lead to a whole number of encounters, from the crossdressing dwarf to a room full of nugs- think a pig crossed with a naked mole-rat.
    • The comic books Those Who Speak and Until We Sleep has Maevaris, a Tevinter Magister who's the former lover of Varric's cousin who is revealed to be transgender later on. Other than that, her gender doesn't play into the story in any way,
    • Dragon Age: Inquisition has Krem, a trans male human who serves as Iron Bull's lieutenant. According to Bull, the Qunari term for transgender people is Aqun-Athlok and by their society are treated as whatever gender they recognize themselves as. He also states that any female that wishes to become warriors (traditionally a male role in Qunari society) and are skilled enough at it be treated as thus and sent to the military, though that's more a culture-specific thing.
    • The Aqun-Athlok concept is a bit different to most transgender experiences, however, in that it is based on what role a person takes under the Qun; if someone is a warrior, for example, they are a man because only men can be warriors, regardless of a person's assigned gender at birth. This is why Sten is so confused by a female warden, because in his culture, women literally cannot be warriors while still being women — they would be accepted and treated fully as men, however. Iron Bull mentions having to do some mental gymnastics to deal with it; he privately counts Cassandra as a man or woman depending on if she's wearing armor, although he makes sure to use female pronouns and not be a dick about it.
  • Subaru Kujo in the fifth Sakura Wars game is pretty clearly genderqueer; zie always uses gender-neutral speech (at least in the Japanese version), refuses to identify as male or female, and dresses in both masculine and feminine attire.
  • Pokémon:
    • Blanche from Pokémon GO is an androgynous individual who is referred to gender neutrally (aside from languages that aren't unisex). Nonbinary Means Androgyny
    • Pokémon X and Y has one "Beauty" trainer from Battle Tower mention: "Yes, a mere half year ago I was a Black Belt! Quite the transformation, wouldn't you say?" Black Belts are a type of trainer consisting exclusively of men (as opposed to their Distaff Counterparts, Battle Girls), suggesting this particular Beauty underwent gender reassignment surgery. The Japanese version of the game is less ambiguous: The Black Belts' Japanese name, Karateoh, translates into "Karate Kings"; and the Beauty makes mention of "modern medicine".
  • Zonda from Azure Striker Gunvolt is capable of swapping between male and female forms at will and is referred to with appropriate pronouns (initally "xe/xem" in the original translation, but the revised script settles for "they/them"). The sequel reveals that the real Zonda is just female; her armored bigender forms are just an extension of her Septima.
    Zonda: Look at you, you're all boy!
    Gunvolt: I heard you're a little bit of both.
  • The protagonist of Aerannis is a trans woman. This ends up being a major plot point, as the setting takes place in a dystopia ruled by TERFS.
  • The Sims 4 added a feature called Custom Genders in June 2016. This feature allows one to choose the character's body frame and clothing preferences as being masculine or feminine, and whether they can become pregnant, or make others pregnant, or even neither. As a result, transgender characters are very easy to create.
  • Guild Wars 2 has a trans woman character in Lion's Arch named Sya who your character previously met in the personal story as Simon.
  • Technobabylon has Max Lao, female partner of protagonist Dr. Charlie Regis, who when asked about her past casually mentions attending a school that Charlie knows to be all-boys. She apparently "fit right in" at the time.
  • In Read Only Memories, one of the player's major allies, TOMCAT, identifies as nonbinary (as can the player character, if you so choose). Trans Option
  • Bolt from Crypt Of The Necrodancer is nonbinary and goes by they/them.
  • Cyberpunk 2077 allows players the option to make V transgender by making the character's voice and genitals based on different sliders in character creation, something which directly ties in with the game's transhumanist themes.
    • There's also Claire, a minor character in the main plot who stars in her own line of sidequests. If the player finishes them, your reward is her truck, which has a trans pride flag painted on the back.
  • In South Park: The Fractured but Whole, you can make your character either transgender or gender-neutral when establishing your character's gender identity, which causes some minor alterations to other NPCs' dialog. Kyle's character Human Kite identifies as a "Gender-Neutral Alien" while Wendy's character Call Girl identifies as a Gender-Fluid individual, though this only applies to their superhero personas and not the actual characters.
  • In Baldur's Gate: Siege of Dragonspear, the Cleric Mizhena offhandedly mentions that she chose her own name because her parents assumed her to be male and named her accordingly.
  • In Pure Again by Kevin McGowan, two transgender characters undergo a voluntary "Freaky Friday" Flip.
  • In Fallen London and its sequels, it is possible to identify as an Individual of Mysterious and Indistinct Gender, and a number of NPCs also identify this way.
  • The Missing JJ Mac Field And The Island Of Memories is a horror-themed game about the eponymous J.J trying to find her missing friend, with a strong implication that they've both been trying to hide that they're dating. It's slowly revealed that their actual secret is that J.J is a trans girl. The entire game has been a Dying Dream she's had after being Driven to Suicide, after being outed and harassed at university.
  • In the sapphic werewolf interactive novel Moonrise, Ishara and Dawn are trans women. Rosario and Sati are nonbinary people.
  • Legends of Runeterra features two cards, an androgynous human named "Tyari the Traveler", and her form after she ascended into a celestial being simply known as "The Traveler". The latter is decidedly more feminine in appearance, and several lines of her dialogue, including with her younger self as Tyarinote  have her ruminate on her achieving at becoming "who I was always meant to be." While this can be perceived as her achieving her "destiny" in ascending to godhood, this was also written definitively as a transgender transition, with Tyari specified as an AMAB-non-binary becoming female.
  • Tell Me Why, developed by Life Is Strange creator DONTNOD Entertainment, is led by protagonist Tyler Ronan, a 21-year-old trans man who was helped through his transition from childhood at the residential center he now mentors at. The game focuses on Tyler and his twin sister, Alyson, reconciling after ten years while coming to terms with the events leading up to their mother's death as children. The developers worked with LGBTQ+ advocacy organization GLAAD on the game's writing, character design, and voice casting.
  • Bugsnax has Floofty Fizzlebean, who is non-binary and addressed exclusively with gender-neutral language such as "they" and "sibling".
  • The Last of Us Part II: The companion of Abby, Lev, is a young trans man.
  • Undertale has seven named characters that are coded as or implicitly trans or nonbinary. Given that it's already a very LGBT-friendly game with two canon gay couples, one of which is especially prominent since it involves two of the main cast and both of which you help hook up to get the Golden Ending, it seems pretty safe to say that the creator intended them to be trans.
    • Ghost monsters gaining corporeal bodies by fusing with their vessels appears deliberately written to evoke transitioning. The language used by two ghosts to describe their feelings about seeing their new bodies is dripping with gender euphoria sentiments, and after fusing with their bodies they begin using new names and new pronouns (in the base game, "Napstablook's cousin" was referred to by his neighbor Undyne with they/them pronouns, Mettaton is consistently described with he/him pronouns; in the updated Switch and Xbox releases, the narration goes from referring to "the Mad Dummy" exclusively with they/it pronouns, to switching to she/it pronouns for "Mad Mew Mew"; Mettaton's Winter Clock dialogue, which takes place after the True Pacifist ending, confirms she uses Mew Mew as her name and she/her pronouns). Rainbow Lens / Trans Audience Interpretation
    • It is also strongly implied that the Human Child, Napstablook, Monster Kid, the Riverperson, and the first human to fall into the Underground, all are (or were) non-binary, as they are exclusively referred to with they/them pronouns, including by loved ones who know them well. The humans' genders (or lack thereof) specifically is still an enormous point of contention inside the fandom as some fans will not consider them as being canonically non-binary without anything less than say-so from Toby Fox himself, but a good explanation of why the above characters can be assumed to be canonically non-binary can be found here (warning: link contains MAJOR spoilers for several Undertale endings and the Chapter One ending for Deltarune). Non-Human Non-Binary
  • World of Warcraft has Pelagos, a male kyrian aspirant who mentions being female in his mortal life in a certain dialogue option in Elysian Hold. Supernaturally-Validated Trans Person?

    Visual Novels 
  • Kaine in A Profile. It's handled pretty tactfully and pointed out that it makes things pretty difficult for him. He reacts poorly to the issue when it is mentioned. However, despite mostly being handled well there appears to have been some confusion on the part of the writers between this and homosexuality, though it may just be that he simply happens to also be attracted to women. Kaine is AFAB but never felt like a woman, so he started going to school in male clothing and took male hormones to be more masculine. Kaine continues to be treated as a male and gets more female attention than Masayuki. Trans Tribulations
  • Alex Cyprin from Astoria: Fate's Kiss is a non-binary demigod who dresses androgynously and goes by they/them pronouns. Nonbinary Means Androgyny
  • Damien from Dream Daddy is a trans man. He offhandedly mentions his binders in his route.
  • Jun Watarase in Happiness is confirmed to be this. Although initially seen as a Wholesome Crossdresser by yuuma and hachi, the OVA in particular shows Jun overjoyed when accidentally actually turning biologically female (of course, she turns back before the end of the episode).
  • Heart of the Woods has Tara, a trans woman who came out and transitioned a few years before the story began.
  • From the same makers of We Know The Devil, Heaven Will Be Mine features several transgender characters. This is actually explicitly pointed out and discussed by the game's narrative- the children who left Earth to become test pilots were overwhelmingly those who felt like outcasts among their peers, which led to many of the pilots being closeted in regards to their sexuality, gender, or both. What's more, the weak gravity of space explicitly allows one's body to be re-shaped more easily. Of the named characters, Mercury, Pluto, and Luna-Terra are confirmed to be transgender.
  • In The House in Fata Morgana, the intersex Michel is thought to be female at birth and raised accordingly, but he suffers from gender dysphoria from an early age. The pieces finally fall into place when he gains more masculine features at puberty.
  • Avery, the protagonist of Hustle Cat can be played as non-binary; you have the option of "she", "he", and "they" pronouns, and can change them at any time. Trans Option
  • Fran from Missing Stars is nonbinary. They dress in the girl's uniform top paired with trousers. With their androgynous looks and a voice that is just as neutral, even Fran's friends don't know what to call them. Natalya thinks Fran's a girl, her sister Sofiya believes they're a boy, and Erik switches between "she" and "they". Fran is coy on the issue of their gender and lets people use whatever pronouns they want. Nonbinary Means Androgyny
  • Monster Prom
    • Zoe went from an agender Eldritch Abomination to a high school girl. Word of God is that Zoe's struggles with adapting to being a high school student were explicitly written to draw parallels with a trans girl undergoing her transition. In addition, her voice actor is also a trans woman.invoked Rainbow Lens (albeit an intentional one), Have You Tried Not Being a Monster?, and a variant of Trans Tribulations.
    • Any of the four Playable Characters can be trans, depending on player choice. While two appear male and two appear female, it's up to the player to decide what gender they are. When selecting a character, you can have your avatar be referred to with male, female, or gender-neutral pronouns (he/him, she/her, they/them), regardless of what they look like. Trans Option
  • In one night, hot springs, the main character is a transgender woman named Haru who struggles with her discomfort about bathing in front of other people at the hot springs. Trans Tribulations
  • Secret Little Haven is all about Alex, a young closeted trans girl, discovering her identity through the fandom of her favorite Magical Girl anime circa 1999. Gender Affirming Activity
  • We Know the Devil has Venus. This is initially only hinted in some very minor details and a sudden, single change of pronoun in the character's ending, but in the game's Golden Ending both the characters and the narration consistently refers to Venus by "she" after she accepts the devil.
  • When her full story update changed Eve Rogers in Summertime Saga from a supporting character to a major character, during the scene where she undresses for you for the first time you werenote  allowed to choose whether she'd be a girl (and the thing about her body she'd been afraid of showing you would be a disfiguring scar on her groin from a car accident) or a transgirl (in which case it would be her penis). In both cases the main character is cool with it and insists that she's beautiful. Unfortunately because her story had to be written to include both potential routes, the transgirl route doesn't really investigate this facet of her character in as much depth as you might expect- apart from changing the sex scenes and a couple of offhand references (like the fact that her parents had sent her to the Boy Scouts rather than the Girls Scouts like her sister) it's never significantly relevant to the plot again.

    Web Animation 
  • asdfmovie 11 has one guy snidely refer to the "I like trains" Kid as "trainsgendered". He's promptly ran over for it.
  • Helluva Boss: As hinted at by her horn design (which is typically sported by male imps) and confirmed by her voice actress, Millie's sister Sallie May is trans.
  • The Most Epic Story Ever Told in All of Human History: Little Miss Epic is transfeminine. The Epic Skatepark Owner initially doesn’t know how to adjust his “bro” and “dude” verbal tics to account for her gender, but they work it out.
  • Jas from Openness is non-binary and goes by "they".
  • RWBY: While discussing with Weiss whether they should protect Atlas or Mantle, May Marigold explains that her activism in Mantle caused her Atlesian parents to disown her. For trying to disown her as a son, May made sure they clearly understood that their daughter was disowning them in turn. Kdin Jenzen confirmed that May is the show's first on-screen transgender character.
  • Sam's Story is an animated short based on a toy. It's about a young trans boy named Sam. Trans Tribulations with some Queer Since Childhood elements. Trans Work.

    Web Original 
  • Gender-bending is a common element of the Paradise setting. Some (not all) gender-bent characters are Wish-Fulfillment Author Avatars for transgender individuals in real life. Perspectives being a mini-series in that universe about how a trans woman would have lived her teenage life if her best friend and not her had suffered Body Dysphoria instead.
  • Shimmer: A Superhero Fantasy has to do with a trans female superheroine named Glimmer Girl.

    Web Video 
  • Carmilla the Series has LaFontaine, who is non-binary and uses they/them pronouns, and is only referred to by their family name because of their dislike of their feminine given name (Susan). This isn't addressed in the show itself because they aren't out yet, but Perry is seen correcting herself when she refers to them as "she".
  • Coupleish stars two siblings (Dee and Amy) who go out looking for a third roommate. Their new roommate Rachel pretended to be Dee's partner in order to avoid being deported to Britain. The two begin to pretend to be a couple and that's the start of the rom-com series. Dee is nonbinary. Possibly a Trans Work, since main character is nonbinary.
  • Mollymauk of Critical Role usually uses he/him pronouns, but Word of God has stated they are genderfluid.
  • Twinfools of YouTube's "Fighting Dreamers Productions" Cosplay Group was very open about his transition on his own channel but did not carry it into the groups main content. He remains the driving force behind the group playing a majority of the characters and as the main source of the funny.

    Western Animation 
  • Adventure Time: Whether BMO is referred to with he/him pronouns or gender-neutral language changes depending on the episode, easily adopts "male" and "female" roles, and while he talks about wanting to Become a Real Boy he also has an alter ego called Football that wants to be a real girl. Word of God is that BMO is genderfluid, switching between male and female when desired. Non-Human Non-Binary
  • Alfred J. Kwak: Ollie is refered to with female pronouns at the start of the series, but he starts going by male pronouns after a time skip. In a interview 2013 he was comfirmed to be a trans man. Mid Story Gender Change
  • American Dad!: The episode "LGBSteve" has Hayley and Steve join a female roller derby team, who mistake Steve for a Butch Lesbian. Steve goes along with this in order to get touchy-feely with the girls. Hayley eventually has enough of her brother's perving and exposes Steve (literally by pulling his pants down to reveal his taped-up crotch) as a male to the rest of the team. The girls had long since figured out that Steve is a biological male and assumed he was transgender. Hayley is kicked off the team for her treatment of Steve and begins to believe she's transphobic, while Steve begins to wonder if he really is transgender since he was a lot more confident around girls while while pretending to be one (and, as pointed out by the team, he can be attracted to girls and still be trans). He isn't transgender, but both he and Hayley are able to make peace with themselves, each other and the roller derby team. Mistaken For Trans, Transgender Facade
  • Big Mouth has Natalie. Her voice actor is transgender, too. Knowing the story, it's covered by Trans Tribulations.
  • The Bob's Burgers episode "Sheesh! Cab, Bob?" has a trio of friendly, funny transvestites (one being a pre-op trans woman) who befriend Bob on his taxi route, and their only negative attribute is the fact that they're implied to be crackwhores. They even help him out in the climax and only one blink-and-you-miss-it Unsettling Gender-Reveal joke tucked in. Trans Sex Worker
  • Brother Ken from Bro Town is Fa'afafine, a Samoan term referring to being born biologically male but embodying both male and female traits. Could be a cultural variant of "Nonbinary Means Androgyny."
  • In the Captain Sturdy [adult swim] pilot Captain Sturdy: The Originals, it is established that Captain Sturdy's teammate Commander Guts has undergone a sex change and now goes by Brianna. Old Friend, New Gender; watching the clip she may also be covered by "Hypermasculine Trans Woman", as she's depicted with a Lantern Jaw of Justice and a deeper voice than the male characters, and is treated with blank stares upon her introduction.
  • Done once on The Cleveland Show but pulled off with even less tact than the Family Guy example below. The episode doesn't even try to portray Auntie Momma (yes, that's the character's name), originally Uncle Kevin, in a positive light, portraying her as someone who "manipulates" straight men into loving her and being called a "guy pretending to be a woman." At least with Family Guy, there was an attempt at sensitivity and understanding, however clumsy. Just complaining. Not sure about the full context. The wiki implies the character is in disguise, not actually trans — is this correct?
  • Craig of the Creek: Pullstring, of the Plush Kids, using "they/them" pronouns. They may be covered by "Nonbinary Means Androgyny"?
  • Family Guy:
  • Done a couple of times in Futurama:
    • Bender becomes Coilette to keep his Olympic medals in 'Bend-her' and most of the cast have their genders swapped in 'Neutopia'.
    • A recurring minor character on the show is a male-to-female transgender robot called Hermaphrobot, whom Bender once tried to hit on before noticing her manbot-parts. Trans Sex Worker (if I remember correctly)
    Bender: [gasps] That ain't no fembot!
    Hermaphrobot: Damn, chico! One more upgrade and I'll be more lady than you can handle! Why you so stupid, stupid?
    Hermaphrobot: You couldn't afford it, honey! [Snaps fingers.]
    • Parodied in "Proposition Infinity" when the cast attends a pride parade. A hot dog stand grows limbs and a head. Fry asks if it can turn into a race car, but it responds, "Nah, I'm just a pre-op transformer."
  • In The Loud House, Dana Dufresne, who hosts and judges the beauty pageants Lola attends, debuted as a man named Donnie in "Toads and Tiaras" before the later episode "Gown and Out" showed her as a female for the first time. Dana's voice actress Maddie Taylor was transgender in real life, which prompted the in-series transition. Mid Story Gender Change
  • Recess (of all shows!) gave us Mikey mentioning his Uncle Mary. Vince is confused as to why Mikey's uncle is named Mary, and Gretchen just tells him not to ask. However, it's not known if this is the case or if Mary just has a traditionally feminine name. Seems to just be a Gender-Blender Name or something.
  • In the Rocko's Modern Life Netflix special Rocko's Modern Life: Static Cling, Mr. and Mrs. Bighead's daughter Rachel has come out as transgender since the original series (in which she went by Ralph). Coming-Out Story, Old Friend, New Gender, Trans Tribulations, probably Mid Story Gender Transition
  • She-Ra and the Princesses of Power:
    • Jewelstar, a side-character in season 5, is a transgender man. Notably, his counterpart in the original series was a cis woman. Trans in the Adaptation
    • Double Trouble (a large toyline-only character in the original series) is reimagined as a gender-neutral shapeshifter who goes by they/them pronouns. Trans in the Adaptation
    • The creators have also gone on record stating that they designed Perfuma as a transgender woman, but didn't think they could make it canon so they didn't push the issue (and by the time they realised trans rep would be on the table, had already cast a cisgender voice actress). Trans in the Adaptation
  • The Simpsons:
    • Judge Constance Harm says "You remind me of me when I was a little boy."
      Snake: Did she just said she used to be a dude?
    • There are a few characters who are implied to be trans but it may just be one-off jokes (for example, Helen Lovejoy). Brunella Pommelhorst, the elementary PE teacher, was supposed to transition but she still appears as a woman in future episodes.
    • In "Lisa's First Word" when discussing saving money Homer says Bart can sleep with them until he's 21 just like his cousin Frank. When Marge points out that he doesn't have a cousin named Frank he explains that he later became cousin Francine. Unfortunately, the context for this has it implied Frank became Francine because sleeping with his parents for so long warped his mind, and he ultimately joined a cult under the name "Mother Shabubu." Sobriquet Sex Switch, possibly played as Creepy Crossdresser
    • In "The Otto Show": Mistaken For Trans
      Patty: Hello, my name's Patty. I'll be testing you. When you do well, I use the green pen. When you do bad, I use the red pen. Any questions?
      Otto: Yeah, one: Have you always been a chick? I mean, I don't want to offend you, but, you were born a man, weren't you? You can tell me, I'm open-minded.
      Patty: (drops the green one) I won't be needing this.
  • South Park:
    • Mr. Garrison, already a Depraved Homosexual, is this in the least sensitive way possible during Seasons 9-12, first as a straight trans woman and then a Psycho Lesbian trans woman, before identifying as a man again. Variant on Trans Equals Gay, possibly Hypermasculine Trans Woman as the gags often relate to Garrison not looking feminine at all.
    • The Season 18 episode "The Cissy" has Cartman declaring himself transgender (all the while mispronouncing it as "Transginger") in order to gain access to the girl's bathroom and eventually his own private bathroom in school. In response, Wendy becomes "Wendyl" in order to point out Cartman's hypocrisy. The B-plot deals with the fact that Randy Marsh is secretly the singer Lorde, initially using the guise of a woman for the same reason as Cartman. Unlike Cartman however, he eventually develops genuine identity issues. Transgender Facade
    • The Season 23 episode "Board Girls" tackles the issue of trans women in sports when a character named Heather Swanson, a recently transitioned trans woman, beats Strong Woman and many other women at a series of games. The episode frequently references how difficult it is to address transgender issues without upsetting people. However, the episode implies Heather is not actually a trans woman but one of Strong Woman's exes who is faking the identity to defeat women at sports, and also portrays her(?) as a hypermasculine Randy Savage caricature, at one point giving her visible testicles. Hypermasculine Trans Woman subverted, Transgender Facade
  • Steven Universe:
    • Most gems have an Ambiguous Gender Identity, due to implications that they might not identify as male or female, but use "she/her" pronouns. Fusions involving the half-human and male-identified Steven however seem to be nonbinary and use neutral pronouns. Stevonnie, the fusion of Steven and his female friend Connie, is confirmed by Word of God to use "they/them" pronouns. Smoky Quartz, Rainbow Quartz 2.0, and Sunstone, the fusions of Steven and the (presumably female) Amethyst, Pearl, and Garnet, respectively are similar. Unlike other Steven fusions, Rainbow Quartz 2.0 uses both he/him and they/them pronouns while Sunstone uses she/her and they/them. Non-Human Non-Binary; Stevonnie may fit "Nonbinary Means Androgyny" due to being a literal boy/girl fusion.
    • Word of God is that gems aren't female-identified. They're okay with using she/her pronouns and being viewed as female, however most are non-binary women. The show creator eventually came out as a non-binary woman themself and uses the gems to express her own feelings about gender.
    • "Little Graduation" introduces Sadie’s new non-binary Second Love, Shep, who is voiced by non-binary model and actor Indya Moore.
  • Superjail!:
    • Alice is a trans woman, though it's played for laughs because she is very clearly masculine (which has lead to some controversy around the character and her implications). Also, clearly pre-operative given the always-noticeable bulge in her skirt, and (censored) depictions of her oversized genitalia. The Warden lusts after her and is initially unaware of this, though it appears he either forgets about seeing her genitalia at the end of season 2 (due to Negative Continuity) or doesn't mind it. Hypermasculine Trans Woman
    • Bruce is the reverse of Alice and portrayed as overweight and lisping, with an aggressive temper. His personality is delved into less than hers, though he constantly tries to challenge and one-up her in his appearances. Gender inversion of Hypermasculine Trans Woman
  • Subverted with Dr. Girlfriend in The Venture Brothers Her deep voice makes several characters (and viewers, too) initially suspect this, but really she's just a very heavy smoker. Mistaken For Trans


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