Again, you sound really angry about something but I'm not sure what. In one of your earlier posts, you claim she is attacking the audience, treating them like "like they're irredeemably awful for inadvertently supporting" gaming. Which, did you watch the video?
She continues to speak of games and those who play them as if they suddenly pop into existence hating women. When she mentions Double Dragon, she says the name with the same amount of bile and venom you'd say the name of an STD, and then devotes a bit to how horrible it is that retro games with HD makeovers are coming back, treating the world to "this regressive crap all over again" , as if seeing Double Dragon Neon is going to make a 32 year old man suddenly walk up to a woman and punch her in the stomach, going "BIDEO JAMES SAID I COULD"
In regards to the hostility. There's also zero attempt to show how to attempt to fight it or do better, beyond "Make female heroes more!" which as the above post for a Japanese game illustrated, uh, isn't a magic salve.
And again, you make it sound like she's attacking the audience when she really isn't. When watching the segment, she specifically calls out the Double Dragon scene being remade over and over as an example of the dehumanizing effect of the trope. She also makes no such claim that people will see it and imitate it. Her video isn't about people imitating video games, it's about how the trope reduces women to little more than property that is fought over.
You seem to be taking the video as a personal attack on yourself or people you know, rather than as a feminist critique of pop culture. Never once does she seem to attack the audience or fanbase of games. Hell, she even outright says that she grew up playing the same games and they have a "special place in her heart", but still thinks that's no reason
not to discuss when women are sidelined and derived of character.
As for Zelda, she specifically has praise for when Zelda is allowed to help out and be an active player in the game. What she hates, though, is that once she falls into her traditional role, she gets immediately sidelined and robbed of agency. Keen viewers will also note that she specifically praises Wind Waker for the boss battle. But I guess that's not as fun as trying to play "Gotcha."
But really, it seems like people are going out of their way to nitpick the video. Anita is not hostile, her focus is on a singular topic (that's why she doesn't discuss Samus or the Peach's other appearances), and she has a ton of more videos to produce before she's done discussing a lot women's portrayal in games. Hell, she specifically states that the next video will pick up the same subject but for more contemporary games.