Rationalizations made by fans to excuse design flaws after the fact are not the same as the flaws making sense. Moreover, being pieced together doesn't explain the puffing, bunching, and so on, which was the real problem. It was a specially designed military garment.
Neither the reasoning nor the action will magically make it less ugly, nor will they make it more like Batman. There's no excuse for either, as the functions of the suit could have been produced with a more faithful design.
Sweet Jesus, really? It all makes sense now!
And which "realistic" consideration requires overdesigned armour plates? Or roadmap legs? Which "realistic" consideration disqualifies a cleaner, streamlined design? Which "realistic" consideration disqualifies alternative designs that serve the exactly same purpose while simultaneously being faithful, as demonstrated many times in this very thread?
There's this idea that the suit serves a toned down, modern, realistic aesthetic, but it doesn't. It doesn't look real, it doesn't look SWAT inspired. It's not toned-down. It's over-the-top Sci-fi body armour. The really sad truth, though, is that the same people who complain about faithful alternatives being "unrealistic" don't seem to realize that those alternatives contain the exact same elements that afford the "realism" Nolan's suit enjoys, just designed in such a way that they are not ugly, and are more appropriate to Batman.
The BB suit was a soft-armour combat suit. So, how is this soft-armour combat suits less realistic?
The TDK suit is a combination of soft armour and rigid armour. How is
this combination of soft and rigid armour less realistic?
How is this, which is essentially identical to the Begins suit, but with the armour disguised, less realistic?
If someone wants to tell me they prefer the TDK suit based on visual appreciation alone, that's fine--but the idea that it needed to look that way to be convincingly realistic, protective, or functional simply does not fly. Aside from elements of the design serving no purpose (roadmap legs), the purposes served by other elements could have easily been replicated in a more faithful manner.