Apple’s big glassy software future now comes with a way to make it less glassy. In iOS 27, users can adjust the translucency of the Liquid Glass effect, while macOS Golden Gate adds its own Liquid Glass controls under System Settings.
Liquid Glass is still alive across Apple’s platforms, still shimmering through menus and panels, still doing the elegant UI trick Apple clearly likes. The big visual bet has already earned a dimmer switch. After a year of treating translucency like the obvious next step, WWDC’s most revealing design update may be the one that lets people dial it back.
What happens when Apple design confidence meets readability
Liquid Glass was never just a coat of paint. Apple introduced it as a broad visual language, the kind of system-wide design idea meant to make everything feel more coherent, premium, and unmistakably Apple. Then it met actual screens. The more translucent software becomes, the more it has to fight the messy layer underneath it, from busy wallpapers to crowded notifications and half-forgotten widgets.
Glassy interface design is not some forbidden Apple technique recovered from a sealed lab under Apple Park. Windows Vista was doing Aero Glass back when laptops still had DVD drives, Microsoft later revived the frosted look with Fluent Design’s Acrylic material, and Apple itself played with translucency in iOS 7.
Liquid Glass may be smoother, richer, and more technically dressed up, but the old bargain remains the same: make software look expensive, then spend the next few releases helping people see through it.

The readability complaints weren’t pulled from vapor, either. Reddit users and design-focused commenters were already calling out low contrast, notifications that could become hard to read, and text competing with whatever was sitting behind it. A glassy UI looks great until the background joins the conversation.
The new slider though turns that friction into a setting. Apple still wants Liquid Glass everywhere. It just seems willing to admit that not every screen needs the full aquarium treatment. That feels like the right compromise for a design system built around transparency, because transparency is only charming until the thing underneath starts arguing with the thing on top.
Why the escape hatch is the feature
Calling it a “less Liquid Glass” button is cheap, accurate, and probably unfair in that order. Apple made the right call.
A visual system this aggressive should have an escape hatch before the thing someone is trying to tap starts cosplaying as a luxury shower door.

On macOS Golden Gate, the setting can make the effect clearer, more opaque, or somewhere in between, with the more opaque version improving text legibility. That’s better than forcing everyone to live inside the same shiny idea forever. Apple can keep its design confidence, and people can read a menu without bargaining with a wallpaper.
When does polish start acting like noise
Modern software keeps chasing visual polish until the polish becomes another thing to manage.
It looks great in a keynote, then slightly less great when someone’s trying to read a menu in daylight. Screens aren’t showroom objects. They’re where people try to get through normal phone and computer chores without the interface turning every tap into a design demonstration.
Apple didn’t kill the design. It gave everyone a small, elegant way to squint less, which may turn out to be the best Liquid Glass feature of all.
Not the shiniest feature, obviously, but that was sort of the problem.






