‘Microslop’ is heading for Edge – major browser redesign is inspired by Copilot, and it’s already seriously unpopular

  • Microsoft is redesigning the interface of Edge in testing
  • The overhaul takes heavy inspiration from the Copilot app
  • This is symptomatic of a broader push towards all things AI, and has provoked more bad feeling and accusations of ‘Microslop’

Microsoft’s Edge browser looks like it’ll be getting an AI makeover of sorts, with a redesigned interface that adopts a very similar appearance to the Copilot app – and it’s a move that isn’t going down at all well with those fed up of Microsoft pushing AI harder with Windows 11.

Windows Central reports that new builds of Edge in the Canary and Dev channels (the earlier testing avenues) have this revamped interface, which takes some weighty cues from the Copilot app.

That includes context menus and settings panels for the web browser that borrow colors and fonts from the Copilot app, and there’s evidence of another hallmark of said app – more pronounced rounded corners – in the design, too.

As Windows Central notes, the redesigned interface elements are being applied to the browser universally, whether or not you have Copilot Mode turned on in Edge.

However, the Copilot-based New Tab Page (which rolled out to Edge last year) is still only presented to those who’ve enabled Copilot Mode, so others will still get the basic MSN news and Bing feed when they open a new (blank) tab in Edge.

Analysis: a Micro-slippery slope into more slop?

Microsoft Copilot Fall 2025 Update

(Image credit: Microsoft)

Okay, so we need to caveat this, as per usual with anything that’s still in testing. Preview stuff doesn’t necessarily make the cut for release, but that said, it’s hardly surprising to see Microsoft trying to revamp Edge along these lines, as the browser already has Copilot Mode on the alternative New Tab Page (and has long been infiltrated by Copilot).

In short, it looks like Microsoft is committed to making Edge more Copilot-like as a way to try to sell its browser to more people. But of course, if you read some of the feedback about this latest attempt to expand the scope of Copilot – including from many of the people posting on this Reddit thread – it’s already a seriously unpopular idea that they most definitely aren’t buying into.

Not everyone hates AI with a passion (or wants to strip it all out of Windows 11), though, and perhaps Microsoft feels it needs to do something more radical to try and fire up Edge adoption. The browser has been faring badly in recent times, after all, so you might argue that it can hardly do any worse.

I’d argue back that it can indeed get worse, though, and that this is all part of a larger worrying picture. Namely that Microsoft is pushing AI ever more forcefully in Windows 11, and this Copilot-ification (ahem) of Edge may yet extend further into other apps, or even the interface of the desktop OS itself.

As I’ve said for some time now, I don’t think the next version of Microsoft’s operating system will be called Windows 12; it’s likely to be Windows Copilot, or maybe Windows AI, but Microsoft seems very much all-in with the Copilot brand, and this latest redesign move is another piece of evidence as to how heavily the company intends to push with it.

The AI rebellion has been strong, though, and as the new year began we witnessed comments from Microsoft’s CEO, Satya Nadella, about how “we need to get beyond the arguments of slop vs sophistication” with AI. Just look how quickly that’s led to the coining of a new term on social media: ‘Microslop’ (as well as folks urging everyone to Google it a few times a day, to make sure the nickname sticks).

For those unfamiliar, AI slop is a derogatory term for anything AI-related that’s shoveled into a product for the sake of it, bloating things and making them slower (well, more or less – and some might argue that this pretty much encompasses every AI feature). ‘Microslop’, then, is a slogan that (again, arguably) fits the cap that Microsoft has chosen to don not just in relation to Windows 11, but across much of its product suite (notably with the renaming of Microsoft Office to Microsoft 365 Copilot in the past).

Where does all this end for Microsoft? Nowhere good, I’d suggest, if the approach is simply to bury its head in the sand regarding the criticisms leveled at AI, which are reaching fresh heights as 2026 begins. There’s a hell of a lot of eggs going into the Copilot basket, and should these AI features (specifically agents) fail to deliver – or worse still, make a name for themselves as unreliable, or even hazardous – then that could leave the reputation of ‘Windows Copilot’ in tatters.

Besides this, there’s very much a feeling that Microsoft is losing more of the trust of Windows users – a commodity which has already been eroded significantly since Windows 11 launched – and that the least the company can do is address the concerns of those people who are rebelling against the AI trend and rebalance its approach here, instead of berating them for standing in the way of progress.

I remember how when Windows 11 came out Microsoft was busy banging the drum around it listening to feedback from users – but that sentiment seems to have fallen by the wayside for the company when it comes to the AI gold rush.

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