The question is a bit self-defeating, really.
Would you date a fictional character? Fictional characters don't exist, so I wouldn't be able to.
Okay, lets say a fictional character existed - would you date it? Hold up, then the character would no longer be fictional.
Suspension of that aside, I can't think of a reason why I wouldn't have a desire to date a great deal of fictional characters were they real while preserving most of their qualities. After all, a lot of them were wrought in the vein of thought of being ultimate man pleasers, especially in anime where these characters are invented by artist committee specifically for shipping to their customers. Narue from World of Narue, for example, is an unfeasibly perfect girlfriend that exists in a nice fictional bubble of an anime that is specifically focused on dating, her boyfriend an otaku like most of the male viewers are likely to be. Lets not even get started with the design that went behind the characters in dating sims!
To make the conversation really interesting, I suppose I could mention that in expressing a desire to date a real life celebrity, chances are what we're really expressing is a desire to date their fictional presentation of themselves that they sell. Porno stars? Same deal.
"Would you date a fictional character" sort of equals "are you enraptured to a delusion," really. It's okay to acknowledge the effectiveness of sexy figments, you can even utilize them as tools to get your rocks off (as I've yet to read an article from someone in a mental of physical health profession who said that such a release is anything other than healthy) but to try to build a romantic commitment to a figment is most assuredly self-destructive madness.
Would you date a fictional character? Fictional characters don't exist, so I wouldn't be able to.
Okay, lets say a fictional character existed - would you date it? Hold up, then the character would no longer be fictional.
Suspension of that aside, I can't think of a reason why I wouldn't have a desire to date a great deal of fictional characters were they real while preserving most of their qualities. After all, a lot of them were wrought in the vein of thought of being ultimate man pleasers, especially in anime where these characters are invented by artist committee specifically for shipping to their customers. Narue from World of Narue, for example, is an unfeasibly perfect girlfriend that exists in a nice fictional bubble of an anime that is specifically focused on dating, her boyfriend an otaku like most of the male viewers are likely to be. Lets not even get started with the design that went behind the characters in dating sims!
To make the conversation really interesting, I suppose I could mention that in expressing a desire to date a real life celebrity, chances are what we're really expressing is a desire to date their fictional presentation of themselves that they sell. Porno stars? Same deal.
"Would you date a fictional character" sort of equals "are you enraptured to a delusion," really. It's okay to acknowledge the effectiveness of sexy figments, you can even utilize them as tools to get your rocks off (as I've yet to read an article from someone in a mental of physical health profession who said that such a release is anything other than healthy) but to try to build a romantic commitment to a figment is most assuredly self-destructive madness.