Quote Originally Posted by Iscah View Post
Suits are more uniform than dresses.
Google would disagree, seriously. That said, they can still have much greater variety than what we have. And the fact all three are basically the same model with minimal adjustments at the waist is the problem here that shows how little effort goes into that sort of thing in the first place. If they had made a new model from scratch per pants, chances are they wouldn't have looked that similar just by virtue of being put together every time, but they can't even put that much effort into it. On one hand, I get why, on the other hand, that's the thing at the root of the problem here.
I wish I had it on hand but just recently I saw an amazing tumblr post about how dreary most men's outfits are in red carpets and award shows and what not... until they looked at the men of color and the suits they rock. Suits being so dreary in design is a white man's myth in and out of the game.

three sets of equivalent male and female equipment where the female version is interesting and the male version is plain pants again.
These sets actually still fall squarely under that, though? Butler, Best Man's, and Groom are all, like you said, variants of the same suit. Meanwhile ladies got a maid's outfit, the bride dress, and the bridesmaid's dress, all of which are heavily different.
And the Best Man's outfit is gender unlocked to boot.

What do you think they should have done differently with these three specific pairs of pants, while still keeping them looking like formal suit pants?
Different textures. Different heights. Put the buttons on the front instead of on the side... if they're even there at all. Patterns on the legs. Different length of pants even if minimal cuz right now it's about all the same. And give them shoes that would be different enough.