This is a game that already has arm and leg prosthetics options for racecar drivers and sign language options in cutscenes. Not captions, an actual guy doing sign language. It is so incredibly woke it's pretty much it's own parody. That's why.
The sign language actually makes sense because the majority of people who are born without hearing will not learn how to read. Without the association between phonemes and graphemes you're essentially just trying to associate a series of seemingly random glyphs to concepts.
I don't see how that's different than sign language... or any language at all. It's always just a whole bunch of symbols together or not, be it written, spoken, or by gesture. Learning what the letters "Hello" together mean, or what that specific hand gesture means, is about the same.
Also, some 'exotic' languages (like Chinese/Japanese Kanji) are very hard to learn and basically a whole bunch of lines and shapes in all directions, and yet billions of people still know those languages perfectly well.
Since all books are written, as well as the internet, and a lot of medias, you may as well learn to write/read even if you don't know the actual pronunciation.
This is a game that already has arm and leg prosthetics options for racecar drivers and sign language options in cutscenes. Not captions, an actual guy doing sign language. It is so incredibly woke it's pretty much it's own parody. That's why.
The sign language actually makes sense because the majority of people who are born without hearing will not learn how to read. Without the association between phonemes and graphemes you're essentially just trying to associate a series of seemingly random glyphs to concepts.
I don't see how that's different than sign language... or any language at all. It's always just a whole bunch of symbols together or not, be it written, spoken, or by gesture. Learning what the letters "Hello" together mean, or what that specific hand gesture means, is about the same.
Also, some 'exotic' languages (like Chinese/Japanese Kanji) are very hard to learn and basically a whole bunch of lines and shapes in all directions, and yet billions of people still know those languages perfectly well.
Since all books are written, as well as the internet, and a lot of medias, you may as well learn to write/read even if you don't know the actual pronunciation.