Well since this thread isn't as zombified as I thought, I guess I'll plug mine even if it doesn't hit all the markers you're looking for. The Sisters, features a gay guy as one of the major characters, and there's a transwoman who hasn't gotten a ton of screen time yet but who will become more relevant in the following issues. Scott has been pretty well received as good representation of a gay character without having to really make it all about his sexuality, which is a flaw I see in a lot of modern writing on the acronym. The lack of person beyond it. But that's just something I notice. P.B. will be fun, but she doesn't get to be real center stage main character material until shit gets worse off for her.
We're only 135 pages in, and we're four issues from the end of this story arc. It is urban fantasy with a low power tier, and plays off Americana and Satanism as its core mythos.
Story takes place in what is funny enough the most Irish-American town in America, which sort of factors into the ratio of diversity. Really if we're going by more modern percentages there should be more Asian/Indian people, and actually have two of them on the docket but they might get cut unless we really want to delve deeper into the men who also work at Beatrice's strip club. They work better as minor characters, and really they're ancillary. Fun in my other prose, might be fun to bring in. Who knows, we'll see about it next arc just for the sake of me bringing in two characters I used to like writing.
Now I tend to want my work to stand on its own, but for the sake of qualifications, I am a gay half-Indian half-Irishmen. I'm in a relationship with someone else in the acronym.
But I suppose on the other hand I ought to say I'm not sure how "friendly" it might all seem. One of the protagonists is mocked for being mannish-looking and P.B. is sort of getting shut down by her boss and mother about transitioning. I like to write people as people, which means generally terrible unless they have reason to not be; and the specific character choices made for Scott are sort of important in how rose-colored people's views can be. And that'll be fun to explore down the line. I'd say it is portrayed somewhat realistically; or at least the views of the characters are unpleasantly human. Bad terms will likely show up down the line.
Sort of the issue about the genre; especially when I'm searching for something I want in it. So often we're presented as shining or as symbols rather than people; and I'd rather read about a bastard than a paragon. And the issue is compounded when people are just thrown in for the sake of inclusion. But maybe I'm jaded. I'm definitely jaded. Maybe I just want the wrong thing. Saw a BL comic about hitmen and was upset it was cute rather than exploring how disturbed and broken they are by what they do and how the sexual relationship is just their last clinging vestiges of humanity after going full Bundy on folks. I'm definitely not the usual LGBT target audience reader, and that's a shame. I feel like I ought to be able to enjoy more of the stuff, but a lot of it seems to just focus on that one small aspect of who we are; something that may seem huge but in the grand scheme of it isn't as big as whether or not we're good people or whatever. It's late, I'm rambling.
Give it a read if you like people making mistakes and bad choices because human beings are weak and the American idea of the devil is the corruption of the domestic and the undoing of civil bonds between neighbors. That's the general theme of the first arc. Featuring a gay dude, a transwoman, and written by a biracial gay dude.