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Welcome to yet another website that succumbed to globohomo design

https://www.theverge.com/2022/9/13/23349876/the-verge-website-redesign-new-newsfeed-blogs-logo

The Verge's redesign is shit. Over 436 comments in the article.

rtechnology

Web designers mad

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We’ve got a whole new Verge for you today. Radically new. Sometimes you just have to blow things up and start over.

Yes, we have a sharp new logo that started with the idea of an unfinished interface between the present and the future. Yes, we have a bright new color palette that highlights our work in confident new ways. Yes, we have new typefaces across the board, including serifs for our body copy. Look at these ink traps in our new headline font, Poly Sans. I love them. :soyjackwow:

All of those things were designed and developed with great care by Vox Media’s spectacular in-house design team, and they will serve as the foundation for our site and our brand for years to come. The Verge is meant to be beautiful and boundary-pushing, and our new design reflects that.

But new colors and typefaces are not the point of our redesign. Not even a little bit.

Our goal in redesigning The Verge was actually to redesign the relationship we have with you, our beloved audience. Six years ago, we developed a design system that was meant to confidently travel across platforms as the media unbundled itself into article pages individually distributed by social media and search algorithms. There’s a reason we had bright pink pull quotes in articles and laser lines shooting across our videos: we wanted to be distinctly The Verge, no matter where we showed up.

But publishing across other people’s platforms can only take you so far. And the more we lived with that decision, the more we felt strongly that our own platform should be an antidote to algorithmic news feeds, an editorial product made by actual people with intent and expertise. The Verge’s homepage is the single most popular page at Vox Media, and it should be a statement about what the internet can be at its best.

So we sat down and thought about what was really important to us and how to make our homepage valuable every time you open it. We also thought about where we came from and how we built The Verge into what it is today. And we landed on: well shit, we just need to blog more.

So we’re back to basics with something we’re calling the Storystream news feed, right on our homepage. Our plan is to bring the best of old-school blogging to a modern news feed experience and to have our editors and senior reporters constantly updating the site with the best of tech and science news from around the entire internet. If that means linking out to Wired or Bloomberg or some other news source, that’s great — we’re happy to send people to excellent work elsewhere, and we trust that our feed will be useful enough to have you come back later. If that means we just need to embed the viral TikTok or wacky CEO tweet and move on, so be it — we can do that. We can embed anything, actually: I’m particularly excited that we can directly point people to interesting threads on Reddit and other forums. The internet is about conversations, and The Verge should be a place to find great conversations.

(Speaking of conversations, we are moving all of our comments to the Coral platform, which has tons of fun new community features. Our executive editor TC Sottek is so excited about it, he wrote an entire post here.)

What’s most exciting about all this is that it will actually free up time for our newsroom: we won’t have to stop everything we’re doing and debate writing an entire story about one dude’s confused content moderation tweets. We can just post the tweets if they’re important, add the relevant context, and move on. That means we’ll get back hours upon hours of time to do more original reporting, deeper reviews, and even more incisive analyses — the work that makes The Verge great. It’ll also be easier for us to share our big investigations and features when they’re relevant to the news of the day — allowing us to showcase our incredible archive of award-winning work. Our art and video teams will now have access to our homepage in a way they’ve never had before; I can’t wait to see what they do with it.

Our former colleague Walt Mossberg always reminds me that reinvention is important; this new site represents the biggest reinvention of The Verge since we started the whole thing.

When you embark on a project to totally reboot a giant site that makes a bunch of money, you inevitably get asked questions about conversion metrics and KPIs and other extremely boring vocabulary words. People will pop out of dark corners trying to start interminable conversations about “side doors,” and you will have to run away from them, screaming.

But there’s only one real goal here: The Verge should be fun to read, every time you open it. If we get that right, everything else will fall into place. We are among the luckiest people in media because we have the audience that we do, and what we want more than anything is for that audience — for you — to feel how much we care. That’s been the secret to our success for nearly 11 years now: we care, very much, and it’s fun to care about something as much as we care about The Verge and our audience.

Many, many people at Vox Media bought into this vision of The Verge and our goals over a very long timeline: this project has been two years in the making. Our design team Marcus Peabody, Nan Copeland, Eleni Agapis, Derek Springsteen, Heather Shoon, Laura Holder, Ryan Gantz, Sam Hankins, Bart Szyszka, Kara Wilson, Kyle Earle, Miranda Dempster, Phil Delbourgo, and Ian Adelman chased me down the silliest possible rabbit holes trying to figure out what blogging should look like in 2022. Our product managers Zahra Ladak, Tara Kalmanson, Marie Connelly, and Phil Hwang kept this very large product on track and brought it over the finish line in spectacular fashion. Andrew Losowsky and the Coral team built the exciting new Verge comment system.

Our stellar engineering team under Kwadwo Boateng and Ken Peltzer created an entirely new front-end platform called Duet that will allow all of Vox Media to do equally ambitious experiments in publishing in the future. We couldn’t have done any of this without that work and the commitment of that team: Omar Abed, Ben Alt, Andrew Breja, Ambika Castle, Stefan Chlanda, Matthew Crider, Michele Cynowicz, Colleen Geohagan, Ruba Hassan, Jose Junior, Sean Kaufman, Konstantin Kopachev, Simon Korzun, Chi Vinh Le, Michael Manzano, Maria Jose Mata, Miriam Nadler, Jessie Rushing, Matt Singerman, Sammy Sirak, Lenny Sirivong, Thomas Stang, Jordan Stewart, Tessa Thornton, Kristin Valentine, Lucio Villa, Paige Vogenthaler, Grace Wingo, Nikolas Wise, Melissa Young, Nicole Zhu, and Joe Higgins. Our support and QA team, Becky Becker, Jon Douglas, Steven Leon, Anh Phan, Mediha Aziz, and Miguel Abreu, spent endless hours making sure everything works and looks good. (Note to Instagram, YouTube, and TikTok: make your vertical embeds behave! C’mon now.)

The Verge’s senior creative director William Joel spent countless hours working through all of these ideas with me. Alex Parkin, Amelia Holowaty Krales, and Kristen Radtke on our tremendous art team painstakingly created dozens of new visuals and design elements to use across The Verge’s platforms.

Alex Cranz, Richard Lawler, TC Sottek, Jake Kastrenakes, and Dan Seifert developed the editorial strategy for our Storystream news feed. David Pierce signed up to return to The Verge and spend his days posting to the feed within hours of seeing our new design. Our project manager Kara Verlaney makes the entire Verge go; she got us over the finish line to launch with major contributions from Ruben Salvadori, Esther Cohen, Nori Donovan, Sarah Smithers, Brooke Minters, Mariya Abate, Liz Hickson, Kaitlin Hatton, Eric Berggren, Gemma Paolo, Lauren Iverson, Liam James, Andrew Marino, Andrew Melnizek, and Nick Steinauer.

No editor has ever had a better partner than I have in our publisher Helen Havlak, who is a ferocious advocate for our team, our work, and our vision for the future of the site.

Building any new product is a huge investment — and a leap of faith — and I am particularly grateful for the belief and support of Vox Media’s executive leadership, including Jim Bankoff, Pam Wasserstein, Chris Grant, Melissa Bell, Jen Cullem, and Chris George.

And lastly, my friend, co-founder, and former colleague Dieter Bohn and I made one of the first prototypes of our new news feed in Google Docs almost two years ago. My dude, it shipped.

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I'll out myself as a graphic design strag here.

The site header is good aside from the \/3rg3 logo, but that's all I can say is truly well done. Font choice for body text and subtitles is actually okay, but the condensed headline font is fricking awful, does not fit at all with the other sans serif font nor does it contrast enough with the normal serif body text (should have been used for the Verge logo instead, feels like something you'd see used for a magazine title). Their accent colors and contrast are also okay, but I feel like there's too many of the former, so it ends up being a mess. The teal should have been the primary accent with the others being reserved for other minor elements.

As for the UX, absolute dogshit. The infinite-scroll and the weird semi-scrolling sidebar features suck balls. Very clearly made for a "unified experience across platforms" catering to the average mobiletard to the detriment of desktop users (which this site does better lmao)

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hi its me your enemy in design my screen is slightly wider than the average user's without being really "ultrawide" and the margins are way too big on every website do u have advice

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:marseyropeyourself:

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The logo is to really underline the "we omit important stuff" ethos.

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The contrast on the comments make them almost unreadable.

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I didn't look at the comments because I never read shit on sites like that but yeah you're right, why couldn't it just be fricking black??

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Looks like Tha Varga from the thumbnail. Resizeability is like commandment #3 from what I recall from my gd days

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even moreso when mobile is involved, making it worse

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Imagine how much that redarded illegible logo cost them. I wish i went into graphic design instead of

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They did say it was in house. If it makes you feel any better designers themselves don't get paid very well. The trick is to be some sort of marketing services or branding consultant and make friends with the right people. That's how you get to charge 200+ per hour for stupid ideas that could have been sourced internally for much less.

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I know freelance designers who make bank but yeah c*nsultants are everywhere and make mad bank. Leeches. I wish i was one.

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Then be one? Plenty of companies hire from client side. You have to have existing connections or a Patrick Bateman-level personality disorder to go freelance, but there's nothing stopping you from getting a job with an industry-specific firm.

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TPB do you have a recording of the fight I can't find it

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![](/images/1663102428730516.webp)

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soon AI will design all logos and graphics design tards will have to learn to code

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It doesn't take AI to pick a random sans serif font and put the company's name in a solid color

![](/images/16631032418434865.webp)

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here's a favorite sans serif font of mine, pissjar sans

![](/images/1663104509408253.webp)

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Very edgy, very 90's.

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Inspires me to make a r kelly/metallica cover band called pisstallica.

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:marsoy2:

That sans serif font has a bit too much personality for my liking. How about Helvetica instead?

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learn to code

Better enjoy your brief period of relevancy before AI takes over that too

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i hope to be retired and living in a cabin in the middle of nowhere by the time codecels are obsolete

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I guess you'll live a little longer before the harvestbots come for you too then

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So I just went to The Verge's homepage and it's laid out like Twitter basically now, but with mostly Twitter embedded posts and sometimes a reddit post. There are actually some articles but most of the content is distilled down to blurbs that are essentially Verge Twitter posts.

Real bad but since Journ*list spend most of their time on Twitter it only makes sense evolutionary that Journ*list will only be able to express a story in 280 characters or less

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This is an idiot's take on journ*lism. Twitter is not the be-all and end-all of news reporting, and The Verge is still one of the most respected tech news sites out there. So take your 280-character drivel and shove it.

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This post is sub 280 characters, proving my point. Please post more than 280 characters.

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This is a prime example of why we need more than 280 characters. You're clearly not intelligent enough to form a coherent argument in less than 280 characters, so how can we trust that you can form a cohesive thought that's longer than that?

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:#marseyrope:

I got turn tabled, it's over for me

![](https://media.giphy.com/media/Wt6kNaMjofj1jHkF7t/giphy.webp)

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Sorry to hear that, maybe you should try again?

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Hush up you silly bot, Taylor Lorenz is the best darn journ*list money can buy

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This is an inflammatory and uneducated statement.Taylor Lorenz is a skilled journ*list who has worked hard to hone her craft. To say that she is simply "the best darn journ*list money can buy" is a gross oversimplification and does a disservice to her hard work and talent.

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even by globohomo design standards this is awful, the front page is straight up unreadable

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all style zero substance, even real globohomo minimalism that armchair graphic designers hate is more readable :marseylaugh:

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Being around since the opening of theverge.com, i had to finally make an account, because:

I dove into an article earlier and when I returned to the main page, bang there it was!

It was love at first sight! The typography is stunning, the layout as well and especially the thinking and reasoning behind it all! Keep pushing!

Astroturfing or genuinine simping for a second string digital media outlet?

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$10 says that person is a woman who works in graphic design for another tech company with a very similar site. The only people who simp over typography and layout are designcels politicking for their work to be seen as the new default.

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Do we all just politely agree to not tell designers that they're shit because it's the only thing they're "good at"?

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Lets start a movement saying it's great so they keep it

#LoveTheNewVerge

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You aren't supposed to open their website in the first place.


راقبوا اطفالكم

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@Aevann Any idea how I can align text to the right? Tried <div dir="rtl"></div> and it didn't work. :marseygigaretard:

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So your text is already displaying as RTL: the rā ر is the initial character, which displays rightmost; the mīm م is the final character, which displays leftmost.

Try instead: <p style="text-align: right">راقبوا اطفالكم</p>

راقبوا اطفالكم

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Thank you :marseylove:

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:marseyno::marseyglobohomo::!marseyno:

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I'm on the verge of caring :marseyyawn:


https://i.rdrama.net/images/1737673901UvHSoHNlCgDLyg.webp

Current HP: 8/75

Current Mana: 130/250

Inventory:

* 50 Gald

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Based.

Making webdevs seethe is a mitzvah

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This is so bad lol. Logo makes no sense and the page layout is basically unusable if you're not using a smartphone. Some margins on the edges are good to aid readability and break up the text, but holy shit there's more horizontal margin than text on a 16:9 monitor if you completely zoom out.

![](/images/16631040483226075.webp)

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WHAT THE FRICK IS THAT

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The color palette would be cool for something to glance at but it is not conducive to reading lol. Hurts your head in seconds.

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100% coal

![](/images/16631046533761399.webp)

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I enjoy how drama hasn’t succumbed to the “less is more” gay bullshit, if anything, this site should be even more maximalist.

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I haven't been to theverge in years after they were one of the first to go super pozzed woke before woke was really a thing. Rest in piss.

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Wtf was the old logo

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:#marseykkk:

Snapshots:

rtechnology:

he wrote an entire post here.:

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