Apple's Liquid Glass UI marks the end of flat design

5 Penguin_ 3 6/12/2025, 11:06:26 PM
Designer here. I wrote this piece after watching WWDC25 and realizing how drastically Apple just shifted its UI paradigm.

It’s not flat. It’s not skeuomorphic. It’s something new — a tactile, motion-driven, almost emotional interface approach. They’re calling it “Liquid Glass UI,” and it breaks nearly every design convention we’ve followed for the last decade.

Curious to hear what folks here think. Is this Apple getting ahead of the curve… or just overdesigning for the sake of aesthetics?

Article here if you want the full breakdown: https://medium.com/@dahsmartgirl/apple-just-killed-flat-design-at-wwdc25-heres-what-it-means-for-ux-8a84cdf00234

Comments (3)

3dsnano · 18h ago
It’s the same old shit that no one wants. It divides us into two camps and we all take shots at each other about some pointless UI fashion.

This argument is tired and worn out. Fuck it. Grow up, use a computer as a bicycle, don’t worry about whateverthefuck color it is.

3cats-in-a-coat · 10h ago
"Everything new is the well forgotten old" is in full force here.

Although I didn't think we'd forget Mac Aqua, Windows Aero and Glassmorphism so soon. Three different times in the last 25 years when this trend kept popping up. Except... worse every time.

Aqua was simple and functional. Slightly cheesy maybe, but very usable. At the time, impressive. While Liquid Glass is... a bizarre display of form over function. Its transparent with the aim of blending in, and then performatively distorting the light behind, even diffracting it into a rainbow in some components (?!) which is the opposite of "blending in". It distracts by design.