Yes, but that raise the next question: If other races are actually "normalized" then why aren't there appropriate eyewears made for races with different features? You can't just say "They haven't got to that yet" because brands would INSTANTLY jump on that opportunity to be the first provider for the niche races, and glasses are simple enough to make without needing to reinvent the wheel.well description says "where monsters are somehow normalized into society", so it's a play on a monster trying to look 'normal'.
well i think their idea of 'normalized' means being made to look akin to a 'normal' human, regardless of the practicality (like a one eyed char wearing normal glasses). Not normalized as in monsters using monster-designed things in a manner similar to humans.Yes, but that raise the next question: If other races are actually "normalized" then why aren't there appropriate eyewears made for races with different features? You can't just say "They haven't got to that yet" because brands would INSTANTLY jump on that opportunity to be the first provider for the niche races, and glasses are simple enough to make without needing to reinvent the wheel.
Because he is crosseyed, obviously.
Society told him that having normal glasses is cool so he goes with a flow rejecting his own way.
So where's the fictional part of this setting?Set in a dystopian future somewhere in Southeast Asia where "monsters" are somehow normalized into society,