I don't think that's why nobody will use it. The real reasons are:
1. People who want Rust will just use Rust. You can keep your Rust code simple if you want, most of the time. I think most people that object to Go's issues have moved on from Go by now. Kind of like how safe C++ has no chance because most of the people that get it have left C++ already.
2. It's clearly not mature. Not many people jump on one man languages. If this was backed by a large company I suspect the story would be different.
Still, it seems to be tastefully designed. Might have a chance I guess.
1. People who want Rust will just use Rust. You can keep your Rust code simple if you want, most of the time. I think most people that object to Go's issues have moved on from Go by now. Kind of like how safe C++ has no chance because most of the people that get it have left C++ already.
2. It's clearly not mature. Not many people jump on one man languages. If this was backed by a large company I suspect the story would be different.
Still, it seems to be tastefully designed. Might have a chance I guess.