In China, the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) has drafted a plan that mandates physical controls for key functions. It addresses the complaints of many drivers and focuses on driving safety: the more you have to search for a function on a display, the greater the distraction – and the higher the risk of an accident. The programme has been running since 2023. According to the current draft from China, buttons or switches for indicators, hazard warning lights, window regulators and windscreen wipers will be mandatory in future. Gear changes will also have to be made physically, rather than via the touchscreen. You never know, more reliable, perhaps also back to this, not any switch or electric motor and sensors. The aim is to improve road safety.
The new regulations are to apply to vehicles whose production begins on or after 1 July 2027. Selling a car in China? You will have to comply., also the European car manufacturers, everybody back to the drawing board. Two production lines, one for the old fashioned touchscreen cars and the other for the reborn switches? Not very likely.
In case such a modern designer were to look around questioningly, wondering what a switch actually looks like, and visit this (highly unlikely) friendly forum, I took a photo as a reminder. You have to help them a little to get over the mental shock of building a Fred Flintstone car.

