@HulkHoQuinn When I choose skintone, often time I don't think of characters' races. The lighter:darker ratio of skintone are also varied from style to style. I know I tend to have a lighter skintone choice because it's pleasing to my coloring style, while if I choose a dark skintone, it would be somewhere around the brown-ish color (chocolate color). When me and my friends draw the same character, her art tend to have darker skintone than mine when you use the eyedrop tool to analyze! Idk skintone has never been that much of a bother to me I guess LMAO
@isaacfriedman Oh yes, drawing realistic is easier to stick with specific racial feature, while my "manga" style is sort of generic and usually overlook racial futures. While I can try to incorporate those things in, my character designs are often just whoever/whatever appeals to me at that time. So when people ask "how did you come up with A's design?" I could only shrug most of the time lmfao
@joannekwan OMG jeez that is bad LMFAO People shouldn't be so nitpicky! 
@Michelle Ay I got what chu mean! TBH When I design character, I often don't think /that/ deep into how I should incorporate their race into the character designs. I just draw whatever that appeals to me and fix it up later. Most of the time, my character design reflects more of their personality and lifestyle rather than their "origin" ;_;
@shazzbaa Ah right! I mean most of my character's design will have all different skintone because it'ss fun to switch palette around, but I wouldn't go out of my way and say they are all "white" nor "this person is black". But yeah, I understand what you mean! Funny thing is that there was a few Chinese novels I read, everyone was Asian (Chinese to be specific) even when the setting was in America, and I actually had never questioned that... I guess I have never been that much bothered by racial diversity and just enjoy the work for what it is haha
@stnmaren Yes that was what I told people haha, I didn't have a specific race in mind when I designed the character, and I would like to keep them racially neutral since what I want to focus on is the plot and the character's development, not what race or country they came from. I just tend to pick the lighter skintone when I color character because it just goes well with a lot of my color choice, plus my shading style. Although I do adore some dark colored skin character and would surely include a few of them in the future.
@Tanisha I received a lot of "Asian stereotype" ever since I moved here in America and honestly by this point they no longer bother me. I mean my family gave me worse with calling me fat and chinky eyes LMFAO (Relatives have no mercy when it comes to words sadly, but once again, I'm used to it)
@punkarsenic I think mainly because racism has been a big problem going on for a while, I have the tendency to avoid it. The thing about racism is that it's usually just a battle between "black" and "white", to the point I feel like as an Asian, I can only stay neutral and not taking any side because who am I to judge? To me who has been reading Japanese manga and Chinese novels growing up, a racial neutral character is more "Asian" to me, but that is probably just me LMFAO. Even if the character has pale skintone, they are Asian, even if the character has different eye and hair color, they are still Asian.
Oh I forgot to include it in the original post but I did say bellow, "anything as long as they aren't being racist or badly stereotyping people", unless the comic was meant to do that... then I have no word.
@zetina
I honestly feel your pain, right, here.
Most of the time, I just want to tell a story with my comic/novel. I think about the plot, I think about how the character should look base on their personalities, how they should interact with each other, but I often leave out their races because in a way it's not "important" to me. I grew up in a small third world country in Asia with no racial struggle. I only knew about the struggle between black and white American after I came to the states. I understand the need for diversity, but at the same time I also have seen a lot of extreme and unreasonable argument coming from people who cry for diversity to the point I couldn't bring myself to care anymore. Overall I'm a very neutral person, I don't like taking side, I think in a way that part of me also got carried into my work..