The way I understood it & mostly substantiated below - Gauge number has its origins in how many passes the material went though the rollers/dies. So 10 gauge = 10 passes, 15 gauges = 15 passes/ More passes = material thickness reduction. Explains why there is not a linear reduction relative to 1 even step gauge 'unit'. And why different materials have different thickness/gauge size vs say steel based on their ductility. And why wire gauge is different again. (half way down this link)
https://www.machinemfg.com/sheet-metal-gauge-sizes-chart-inch-mm/
Personally my brain feels better with good old thickness because it works across a wide range. But unless you are the inventor of the unit you don't get to vote. We Imperialists have a good feel for Horsepower even though these days we don't have much to do with horses or what they can power... unless we watched a YouTube video. In metric lands they predominantly use PS (Pferdestarke or 'horse strength'). Which is metric horsepower = 0.98632 mechanical HP, equivalent to lifting 75kg mass one metre vertically in one second. We prefer lifting 550 foot-pounds per second thank you very much. I just feel bad for the horse LoL.