Google, Why Am I Playing Whack-A-Mole In Search?
Google, Why Am I Playing Whack-A-Mole In Search?
Consider this a rant piece by me β and a demonstration of how UI/UX designers should NOT do when designing interfaces. Unless their aim is to purposefully slowing down users from utilizing their muscle memory, as this case demonstrates.
As a writer and editor, naturally we search lots of things as we write. Product images, information, what-have-you. Naturally, Google search comes to mind β thereβs a reason βGooglingβ is a word in Oxford Dictionary but not necessarily βBing-ingβ. (βBingingβ is a word, but definitely not originated from Microsoftβs search engine.)
One day as I was searching for images, I accidentally clicked on βShoppingβ section despite the fact I was sure I move my mouse on the second button from the left β where youβd expect βImagesβ to be. I scanned through the entire line of buttons, and found the βImagesβ button was placed randomly in a place further down the line. It happened relatively recently, Iβd say probably within this month (June 2023 in case you came from the future). For context, hereβs how the search UI looked like, before the redesign:
And this is what happened after the redesign:
Β
The biggest difference visually is the lack of icons and text are now essentially βbubblesβ with rounded rectangles, which is all the rage in recent UI designs in literally everything β Windows, Android (Apple is the exception, since they embraced this design language a long time ago before it got wildly popular), or even more obscure platforms that isnβt necessarily an operating system. All took the edges off, increase white spaces and generally makes buttons larger than they are β something that irks me as a PC-first user. But thatβs another topic, perhaps for another day.
And to be fair β Google already do shuffle the buttons around depending on what you search for. The old version sometimes puts the βNewsβ first before βImagesβ, but thatβs largely about it β the entire line is still a very simple navigation of which category you want to search the term under, and at most you have five main sections to contend with, accompanied by respective icons so you donβt easily get confused.
However, the crucial difference in the new version is the inclusion of other suggested results. So now what weβve ended up with is aΒ rojak mix of search filters and suggested results, all placed in a way that buttons can literally jump across the page and youβll most likely have to take a few extra seconds to scan through 9 buttons, then pick the one you actually want to go. Hereβs another comparison between two search entries:
Notice any difference again? (Hint: look for βVideosβ.)
So now what Google is effectively telling me, is to use my mouse as an imaginative mallet trying to Whack-A-Mole my way into the section I intend to go. Why? In any case, it looks like Google decided to prioritize suggestions more than sections, which is now relegated into this rather invisible menu sitting in the far right corner of the page.
I tried to find if thereβs any mentions of updates from Googleβs blog, but I canβt seem to find anything about it β nor has anyone ever reported on Google having a design update on their Search. Could it be a beta testing that I somehow ended up in? Thatβs unlikely, since thereβs absolutely no mentions of me being enrolled in a beta program (I tested this on a incognito session just to be sure).
As no explanation exist, Iβm in a bit of uncharted waters here. So I head into whatever settings page available to see if thereβs a switch to turn off what looks to me is essentially just another form of suggested-content shenanigans that companies love to push for more βengagementsβ. Nope β that doesnβt exist either.
So at this point Iβll have to make some educated guesses as to why Google made this change. Itβs probably in the lines of βtailored experienceβ which, to be fair, is a completely valid point. However, I find this feature β or at least the current implementation β rather redundant, and hereβs an example with the term βMalaysiaβ:
βTimeβ, βReligionβ, βMalaysia Airlinesβ and βCurrencyβ. Things that travelers usually search for when theyβre looking up information for a country. But Google, your search box is literally up there! See what happens when I click on it!
Take this as a power userβs perspective β I find this new feature rather redundant for one, and more often than not it gets in the way of me trying to do my job quickly and efficiently. I canβt speak for most people who might not even care, since itβs just one extra second, one extra click after all. Hereβs a suggestion if youβre listening Google β how about, making search suggestions and search categories separate? You know, like it always has been?
In any case, Iβd like to hear your comments. Do you like this change?







