I see this quote posted a lot by people who hate Vavra, but can someone explain what is actually wrong with it? People have definitely accused games of being sexist for all of those things before, so I can't see how it's not true.
Let's look at it phrase by phrase.
If women in your game look good, you are sexist
Well, that's not true. It's perfectly possible to have good-looking women in games without being accused of sexism, mainly by not sexualising them out-of-context and not just using them to add window dressing. Treat them like the other characters, with aspects other than their looks, the characters commenting on their looks or the camera caressing them at any opportunity.
If they look bad, you are sexist
There really aren't that many 'bad-looking' female characters in games, they tend to be either extremely good looking (the vast majority) or grotesque (a tiny minority). 'The inclusion of somewhat less attractive female characters would actually be a step towards diversity considering the trend for them looking like either supermodels or monsters with little inbetween.
If you can fight with them, you are misogynistic
The most visable/common female enemy units in games are probably in Bethesda's Elder Scrolls/Fallout games, I've never seen accusations of misogyny for a game including general female enemies. If they exist, it certainly isn't the majority opinion.
Edit: I did see people complaining about Drake getting beaten up by Nadine in Uncharted 4, but that was more about men moaning about not being able to beat up a professional soldier who happened to be female. Funny that.
if you don't have any women, because there is no correct way to have them, you are misogynistic
I've never seen Total War accused of sexism for not including women in several hundred different historical military formations. If it's a fantasy game, history doesn't apply. If historical accuracy is important to the game, don't bend the rules to make it even easier to include one group of people and exclude others. Simple.
it's a witch hunt and it's affecting my artistic freedom
No, it's criticism of such shitty opinions based on sweeping remarks about women as a whole. You are free to create what you like, but if you talk a load of easily refuted generalisations about reactions to female characters in games in a public forum, having multiple people point out that your arguments don't make sense is not a witch hunt. Being proud of ignorant statements and t-shirts that wouldn't be out of place at an alt-right rally doesn't add credence to generalised claims of understanding the 'hypocrisy' of how women think.