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Yes – and I commented back when the beta first came out that the home screen really made me feel edgy and disoriented. I wouldn’t have used the term “crooked icons” but I did do what I could with the settings to try to get rid of the reflections around the edges of the icons and folders. I don’t like it and would be quite happy if it went away.

On the other hand, I like the liquid glass enhancements within the apps. It’s just the way the home screen looks that bothers me.
 
Reasonable distinction. (But is this really not an optical illusion in the general sense; isn't differing the weights and colours of lines around corners and edges to suggest distortion classically an optical illusion?)

Why I said not in the general sense is because it does not appear to be affecting most people (hard to know how many without a full scientific study). It is an optical illusion but because of how our brains perceive and create visual experiences, if something only affects a minority, then we are less confident it's only a perceptual issue and isn't instead or also due to other factors outside basic perception. This is getting into the weeds of sensation and perception, which I don't have time to fully flesh out here.

Apparently this is not necessarily true, as at least one other user pointed out. I'm using a Mac mini, an iPhone 12 mini, a 2018 iPad Pro, and a current iPad mini (A17 Pro), and I'm only observing the shifting effect on the iPad mini. And even there, the shifting effect occurs on the Home Screen with app icons, folders, and widgets, but not with icons in the Dock!

Are you talking about the subtle glow effect around icons that moves when you tilt a device? That's what my comment was about and what the article I was 'correcting' was talking about. It's specific to iOS and appears to be tied to the accelerometer; the glow moves around the outside of the icons when you tilt an iOS device around. I've seen it on my iPhone 16 Pro, iPad Air, my wife's iPhone 16, etc.
 
i understand about some people not liking the new icon design language.

for me, this "highlight" that is being put most noticeably on the top left of the icon, and, less prominently on the lower right of the icon, makes the icon look more like a TILE. a plastic tile, if you want.

i like this very very much.

i think that the way people have become accustomed to seeing icons in general has become to appreciate icons' bright colours and crispness (in the past). this new design language requires people to make a shift to how to perceive icons. and many (most) people will require several weeks before they begin to appreciate this new way.

i don't think any of the valid (negative) reactions to this new iconography was unpredictable by apple. they definitely were predicting that many people would hate it. apple also has figured into it that people's eyes will become accustomed to this new design language.

apple insider has a very very good analysis of this whole thing.
 
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I thought I was the only one experiencing this visual effect, where it feels like the icons are misaligned.

I’ll explain my case and attach a screenshot so you can see if you also notice the issue.

In my experience, it seems to be a visual bug in iOS: sometimes the system “freezes” a reflection, a shadow, or part of the icon animation, which creates the impression that the icons are misplaced or distorted, even though they’re not. No matter how much I move the iPhone, the reflection stays fixed and doesn’t react, until it suddenly corrects itself—this can take anywhere from a few seconds to several minutes.



IMG_3093.jpeg
 
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Apple didn’t have enough features for iOS 26, so it changed the design to make us feel like there were significant changes. But this new design is huge step back for minimalism. Apple is learning the hard way not to fix what isn’t broken.
Here comes the whiners. We literally gets a lot of features for free, and yes there are dozens of new things in iOS26 but it is easier to spread panic and doom
 
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The solution is simple. The edge highlight needs to be toned down by half in opacity when in dark mode. Light mode looks fine.
The solution is to make these new elements stronger or less stronger/off via control/opacity sliders. It’s great to see them using depth effects and parallax again after people complained years ago and Apple muted it. I really hope it doesn’t happen again because it affects ‘some’ people.
 
I thought people were nuts until I upgraded and saw it myself. It is mostly unnoticeable to me, but when you have an icon that is dark grey or black like “X”, it is very obvious. It looks so uncomfortable next to other icons that look fine. I feel like I’m having a stroke or something looking at it. 😖
 
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I already filed a similar issue report to Apple before iOS 26’s launch while using the beta. 🤣🤣🤣

I asked for an option to turn off this “glass” or “3D” icons effect altogether on the Home Screen because it wasn’t applied uniformly and can lead to disorientation for users.

It was a good attempt at 3D but can lead to spatial confusion.

I guess I wasn’t the only one with the issue. 🤣🤣🤣
 
I'm always VERY sceptical about 'complaints' like this, it just sounds like absolute made up rubbish. I mean 'drunk'? Really? Sounds like a them problem, maybe they need an eye test? Or maybe they just need to calm down on the drama. I wonder how many of those 3000 upvotes are from people that don't even own an iPhone?
Exactly I have been using iOS 26 since dev beta 1 and not once did I feel drunk or dizzy.

Just something to complain about.
 
Why I said not in the general sense is because it does not appear to be affecting most people (hard to know how many without a full scientific study)…

Yes, I think that's the distinction I was appreciating; as far as I can tell, we both understood each other and can only repeat ourselves. I was suggesting it's an optical illusion in the general sense because I'd considered it well-established – over decades – that illusions are based on such patterns generally. I suppose you could run a modern study on that just to confirm that isn't all a mistake. (For clarity, I'm commenting on the "fixed skewed" lighting the article was, not the dynamically shifting lighting you mentioned.)

My assumption is that everyone who sees this lighting at least subtly perceives the effect of the asymmetry, but cognitively understands this is intended as a lighting effect and dismisses it. Plenty of people have responded with comments like "meh," or "it's not a big deal," seemingly indicating they perceive it but aren't significantly bothered by it. I don't think anyone's who's seen it has indicated they don't notice it at all.

Are you talking about the subtle glow effect around icons that moves when you tilt a device? That's what my comment was about and what the article I was 'correcting' was talking about. It's specific to iOS and appears to be tied to the accelerometer; the glow moves around the outside of the icons when you tilt an iOS device around. I've seen it on my iPhone 16 Pro, iPad Air, my wife's iPhone 16, etc.

Yes, that's what I'm talking about. Please try enabling "Reduce Motion" on one of your devices and note the lighting around the edges of app icons and widgets. What you're seeing in that case is apparently what many people are seeing on many devices (and on Macs).
 
"Are you suffering from the Liquid Glass optical illusion? Let us know in the comments."

No I'm not experiencing it or "suffering" from it.

Edit: the linked Gizmodo article has at least one inaccuracy: "To create the effect of glass and all of its reflective and shimmering properties, iOS 26 forces every icon on your iPhone home screen to have a slight glow to them in the top left and lower right corners."

That slight glow is around the icons and shifts as you tilt your phone -- it's not just the top left and lower right corners. If I tilt my phone, the glow will travel around the icons (easier to see on folders), shifting from the top/bottom/corners/sides to another location. It's a subtle effect that I think is a cool little detail.

2nd edit: I'm not saying other people are not experiencing the effect, just that I'm not, which is what the author of the Macrumors article asked us to do. Also, while it can be thought of as an optical illusion, it's not quite a typical one. Optical illusions typically affect most to all people who are not seeing impaired. That this is only affecting a subset of people suggests it's more of a particular effect that elicits an abnormal sensory experience for certain individuals. Again, that can be classified as an optical illusion but it's much more limited in scope. And don't think that me calling this an "abnormal sensory experience" is in any way a suggestion that it's invalid. Most to all human behavior is understood to be on a normal (Gaussian) distribution. There will always be people who have and experience things that are "abnormal" (in one of the distribution tails). That's not inherently bad. In many instances it's thought to be positive (e.g, 'superior' IQ).

While there are people experiencing this particular effect, what complicates the potential issue is the effect of suggestion through social pressure. What this means is that some people don't really notice the effect but when it's brought to their attention they start to and might even state, "Now I can't unsee it!" That's because what we perceive is affected by what we pay attention to (we can perceive things we are not aware of) and how we interpret what we perceive.

In effect, some people experience the effect but others do not notice the effect until it's brought to their attention. Some other people also convince themselves or are convinced by others that it's there when they do not really experience it. That's not lying (although it's possible some people are lying about it), it's just the nature of how our brains work. Brains are kind of weird in that way. They are amazing, but weird.

What's likely happening is a small subset of people notice the effect. Some others do not until someone points it out. It's likely that most people will adjust to the changes and their brains will normalize the experience and people will stop perceiving the effect. It's also possible some people will continue to experience it. Our brains are excellent at adapting and normalizing (adjusting to) new experiences most of the time.

If you are experiencing this effect, give it time and it should go away. Just be glad that part of your brain is working well enough to notice something new. If it doesn't go away and it is too distracting, hopefully various accessibility settings will rectify it.

3rd edit: "The issue has gained attention on Reddit, with one post receiving over 3,000 upvotes". Can we stop using things like this as a metric of anything meaningful? There's the issue of selection bias, bots, and more. It's data but unscientific and potentially useless and even misleading data.
Apple Intelligence, please summarize this post
 
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