@Azdaema
I actually think kinda the same, but it seems that many conlangers design flags for their conpeoples anyways, and it might also be a good(though by no means not the only) way to facilitate users to distinguish different languages and peoples/cultures, and flags seem to exist in a wide variety of cultures(at least Eurasian ones) in our world and has become a standard way to symbolise a group of people, and I think that’s why CWS provides the function for conlang flags. Also, I guess one can update something that is not actually a flag but some sorts of pictorial symbols of a conculture, and it is said that all cultures have some sorts of symbolisms. But yeah, I think your doubts are reasonable, there have been cultures that did not use the flag, but there have been no cultures that did not have some forms of symbolism, from what I have learned.
I have one language with 6,000+ words but without a flag, btw.
I actually think kinda the same, but it seems that many conlangers design flags for their conpeoples anyways, and it might also be a good(though by no means not the only) way to facilitate users to distinguish different languages and peoples/cultures, and flags seem to exist in a wide variety of cultures(at least Eurasian ones) in our world and has become a standard way to symbolise a group of people, and I think that’s why CWS provides the function for conlang flags. Also, I guess one can update something that is not actually a flag but some sorts of pictorial symbols of a conculture, and it is said that all cultures have some sorts of symbolisms. But yeah, I think your doubts are reasonable, there have been cultures that did not use the flag, but there have been no cultures that did not have some forms of symbolism, from what I have learned.
I have one language with 6,000+ words but without a flag, btw.