Litigious Li was recently interviewed for lesbian visibility week on the website Piamy.net. Piamy is an app for "lesbian women and other sexual minorities". As one would expect from an app with such a description, it is full of trannies, "asexuals" and people of gender.
https://nitter.net/L_Vis_Week/status/2045795485085208755#m
https://archive.ph/ps3H6
“I want to write about people who are treated as if they don’t exist”
Why does Akutagawa Prize-winning author Li Kotomi continue to write stories about lesbians?
We spoke with her [sic] about “properly” bringing these stories to light, rather than simply creating fantasy for consumption.
Read the article

piamy.net/lvisweek2026/voice…
#LesbianVisibilityWeek #LVW2026
>Why does Akutagawa Prize-winning author Li Kotomi continue to write stories about lesbians?
Because it's his fetish, duh.
I've only quoted some parts of the interview because overall, it's pretty boring and he doesn't even discuss the subject of his 41 billion lolsuits. The funniest part by far is the pictures showing his massive MALE hands.
Akutagawa Prize-winning author Lee Kotomi speaks about depicting lesbians in her [sic] novels
April 18, 2026
https://piamy.net/lvisweek2026/voices/EwQ6FV9V
https://archive.ph/dFh21
Living in Japan, I share several minority identities. I am a woman, I have foreign roots, and Japanese is not my native language. And I am a lesbian. Despite these multiple minority identities, characters similar to myself have been largely overlooked in stories until now. That's why, if I'm going to write, I want to shed light on those who have been ignored. I want to ensure that, at the very least, there is a place for those who are ignored in society to exist, within the world of literature and expression.
Here, he doesn't mention that he's a tranny. Is he still trying to mislead people who aren't in the know into thinking he's a true and honest woman? After publicly having been forced to admit to the fact that he's a tranny and becoming infamous among transphobes worldwide for his lolsuits against TERFs, this is about as pointless as when Hunter Schaffer was worried about being "outed" because the sex marker in his passport got changed from F to M.
I feel that there were hardly any Japanese novels that truly depicted lesbians, except for the works of Rieko Matsuura and Kaho Nakayama. Both of them are writers who have been continuously writing stories about lesbians (though not exclusively) since the 80s and 90s, and they are senior writers whom I respect.
From what I know, Rieko Matsuura is some kind of proto-queer ideologue who also once wrote a novel about a woman who one day wakes up and finds out that her big toe has turned into a penis. Kaho Nakayama is an actual lesbian author. Most importantly, both of them are real women, unlike Litigious Li.
And the third factor [that he takes into account when writing his books] is intersectionality. In Japanese creative works up until now, even if a character is a sexual minority, they have often been depicted in a one-dimensional way, being part of the majority in other attributes, such as race, nationality, or language.
Why wouldn't the absolute majority of gay or bisexual characters in Japanese media be Japanese? The majority of such people living in Japan are going to be Japanese because Japanese people constitute over 95 percent of the population.
This is like when wokes criticize Harry Potter because the ethnic makeup of the characters doesn't live up to their current year +11 standards, even though the United Kingdom was over 90 percent white in the 1990s and the books are reflective of the British population of that time.
Alternatively, even when a transgender character is included, the story is often made "easy to understand" by portraying them as heterosexual. Incidentally, the stereotype that transgender women are always sexually attracted to men, and that if they are not, their gender identity itself should be questioned, is nothing more than an expression of the prejudice that "heterosexuality is the only normal thing."
Translation: he wants to see more stunning and brave transbians in literature because he is a transbian.
However, reality is far more complex. There are certainly people like me who live in Japan, write novels in Japanese, yet are foreign nationals and lesbians—individuals with multiple minority identities. Transgender people also have diverse sexual orientations; they include not only heterosexuals, but also homosexuals, bisexuals, and asexual/aromantic individuals. I believe that future forms of expression should focus more on people living in spaces where multiple minority identities overlap.
"There are [lesbian foreign nationals] like me"
"Transgender people also have diverse sexual orientations"
Here, he talks about trannies as if he's not part of that group. It's obvious he's still trying to mislead people into thinking he's a real lesbian woman, as if people aren't going to find out about his con the second they google him. In fact, they can just visit his own website (the first search result that comes up when you look him up on Japanese Google) and they'll find his article about being "outed" as soon as they go to the News section. What's the point?
--Ms [sic]. Li, have there been any works in your life that have empowered you?
In terms of visual media, I'd say the Netflix drama "Sense8." It features diverse characters, such as a trans woman lesbian couple and a gay couple, and tells the story of how they overcome their differences, unite, and stand against evil.
What a shocker, he likes the Trannychowskis.
-I imagine there are many readers in their teens and twenties who haven't yet affirmed their own identity and are feeling lonely. Do you have a message for them?
The fact that you were born and exist in this world is by no means a mistake or a disaster. I would be happy if you could feel that, even just a little, through my stories.
Trannies are a mistake.
Male hands ahoy: