Yeah. Complaining about a creator making their fantasy world actually culturally diverse instead of yet another fantasy Europe is exactly the sort of unhelpful attitude I alluded to earlier.
Also, as using European influences never elicits such complaints regardless of the creator’s ethnic background, it just strengthens that culture’s position as the dominant default.
I think this attitude holds back the game. I would love new setting material that was inspired by different cultures that I could mine for ideas. But we're stuck with the same-old-same-old because the moment you have a book who's lead author is caucasian that is not based on the same old psuedo-fantasy Europe tropes the controversy storm immediately erupts.
It's not like the "acceptable fantasy setting" bears much resemblance to real world mythology or history, but it's been done to death so it's somehow okay. I think we should be sensitive, I also don't think there should be an author ancestry filter to determine who can create specific works, especially when it's okay if that ancestry goes back generations.