UX Alert: adobe.com

Ah, Adobe, the company known for creating some of the most widely used design software in the world. Let’s see if their own website lives up to the same standards of creativity and innovation.

The fonts on Adobe’s homepage are a mixed bag of styles, sizes, and weights that make me feel like I’m scrolling through a ransom note. It’s like they let an over-caffeinated designer loose in the font library with no supervision.

"Times New Roman, Comic Sans, Papyrus... why choose just one when you can use them all? Adobe's font choice is like a buffet of bad taste."

The user experience on Adobe’s website is about as seamless as trying to edit a PDF in MS Paint. The navigation is confusing, the search function is a joke, and don’t even get me started on the endless pop-ups trying to sell me software I already own.

"Trying to find what you need on Adobe's website is like playing a game of hide and seek where the only prize is frustration."

The UI design on Adobe’s website is so outdated, it’s like stepping into a time machine back to the early 2000s. It’s cluttered, chaotic, and feels like a relic from a bygone era when gradients and drop shadows were considered cutting-edge.

Adobe’s website is a fontastic mess of design disasters. With a UX/UI that’s stuck in the past and fonts that are all over the place, it’s clear that even the masters of design software could use a little help in the web design department.

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Kernelius Boldface

Kernelius Boldface

Kernelius Boldface is the reason Internet Explorer went into retirement. Websites fear him, designers admire him, and Helvetica secretly envies his swagger.