Facepunch is aware that some players don't enjoy the idea of playing Rust as a woman, creator Garry Newman says. He shared one recent player complaint on Twitter that reads, in part, "I got a dirty woman ... and everytime [sic] I see her I wanna threw [sic] up."

"We understand this causes you distress and makes you not want to play the game anymore," Newman says. "Technically nothing has changed, since half the population was already living with those feelings. The only difference is that whether you feel like this is now decided by your SteamID instead of your real life gender."

Facepunch is continually updating Rust and this isn't the end of the character model changes. "I'll continue to add variations over the comings weeks which means you're probably not stuck with your new face forever," Newman writes. (It sounds like players will be stuck with their genders, though.)

In June, Newman told Polygon that he used Rust as a kind of social experiment, and he didn't see any race-based discrimination in the game. However, he was excited to document the future impact of female character models in Rust.

"I'm more interested in seeing what happens when we add the female model," Newman told Polygon. "Whether women will get attacked more because they're perceived as weak, or whether they'll get attacked less because they're perceived as vulnerable. That stuff is interesting to me."