Technology

Microsoft Decides to Take A Leaf From Apple’s Book: Redesigns Office Icons Glossy

Microsoft is rolling out a fresh visual identity for Office, replacing angular glyphs with softer folds, richer gradients, and a design language that leans into Copilot as a unifying brand signal. The update touches all core apps and arrives as Microsoft positions AI features not as add-ons but as central experiences across Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook and Teams.

The new icons trade literal document metaphors for abstract, tactile forms that scale more cleanly across tiny mobile tiles and large desktop toolbars. Color transitions are bolder, contrast is improved for legibility, and simplified shapes reduce visual noise at small sizes, changes aimed at better accessibility and faster recognition. Designers say the goal was emotional coherence, to make productivity feel less mechanical and more collaborative.

For enterprises, the refresh is mostly cosmetic, but timing matters: the rollout coincides with a broader push to embed Copilot features across workflows.

IT teams will appreciate that the visual update is modular and reversible, with admins able to standardize or delay updates in managed environments. Developers who build Office add-ins should test extension icons and high-contrast themes to avoid misalignment.

Early reactions are mixed. Longtime users praise improved clarity at small sizes while some power users lament the loss of instantly recognizable motifs.

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byu/sergeynewton from discussion
inDesign

However, as expected, some Reddit users were highly annoye and skeptical of the new letters:

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byu/sergeynewton from discussion
inDesign

Accessibility advocates welcome higher contrast and simpler shapes, but caution that semantic meaning must remain discoverable, not just pretty.