Hello, and thank you all for sharing your stories. I am very new to Paizo and the World of Pathfinder/Starfinder although I have been playing RPG since the release of AD&D, and I am happy to see that Paizo is openly advocating diversity. The development of 'Coyote and Crow' is interesting and exciting. It is troublesome that concurrently in the community forum there is still an open call for a Moderation Team in regards to intolerance, homophobia and xenophobia. I am curious how you, as Indigenous Developers and Storytellers are bringing traditional, indigenous worldview to the gaming platform. Fantasy role-playing has remained entrenched in a materialist, capitalist exchange-based, goal-oriented ('Patriarchal'/'Imperialist') dynamic. From my experience with indigenous world-views, and non-dominant ('Matriarchal') mytho-magical and animist spiritual traditions, things are not merely things, but Wisdom-Taking-Form; Power is never personal (cannot be possessed, amassed, or bartered by individual Persons) but is always 'borrowed', received or channelled as Power belongs only to the Great Mystery. Human-Beings are not isolated players against a Nature-Shaped backdrop, but Communal Beings living within nature, responsible to and for one another. The land is not territory to be accumulated, nor an indication of personal, individual status, but represents a complex network of interdependent lifeforms in a fragile and delicate balancing act that evokes our stewardship. Indigenous Worldviews provide radically, divergent and Life-Affirming Value Systems. Forgive me if it sounds like I am reducing Indigenous Worldview to a singular, unified sameness; that is not my intention. Instead, I believe that pre-colonial World-Views provide a vital and viable perspective on complexity and difference, a living, embodied critique of the life-denying compulsion to reduce everything to Sameness. For example, many Indigenous cultures throughout the world have a far more complex understanding of gender than the Male/Female binary (ie; Heyoka, Two-Spirit and others); such a lens undermines the 'authority' of 'heterosexual, white males' that continue to bully their way through diverse communities such as this. I hope my inquiry provides grit for rumination and stimulates real dialogue. I believe Fantasy Role-Playing offers an arena for Imagining a better world IRL, not just escapism that reinforces the formula "Complete a task/Overcome the Adversary win XP/GP," and Might=Right. I hope my questions/comments are of value.