But a generalised metric misses some points: practical maps of the world emphasise continuity at the points the mapmaker subjectively considers important. The standard Mercator projection has the London meridian at the centre, not purely because Europe was considered important but because the antipodal meridian through the Pacific, not passing through any population centres, is considered unimportant. Other projections like Goode-homolosine [0] are even more opinionated.
This map emphasises the polar areas, which are front and centre, and introduces a boundary cut along the equator, cutting populous countries like Brazil, Kenya and Indonesia in two. (It's ridiculous to say there's no boundary cut because you can turn the map over - in the same way you can fold a Mercator map or roll it into a cylinder, though admittedly other projections like Winkel-tripel don't have this property).
[0] https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goode_homolosine_projection