Microsoft has quietly killed off Copilot’s Real Talk mode, roughly four months after its initial US launch and just weeks after rolling it out globally (via Windows Latest). All existing conversations have been archived, new sessions are no longer possible, and Microsoft is framing the whole thing as a learning exercise.
The official statement describes Real Talk as “always an experiment,” with plans to absorb whatever worked into the main Copilot product. Reading between the lines: it was interesting enough to mine for data, not interesting enough to stick around.
An experiment that didn’t last
And there was genuinely something worth keeping. Real Talk wasn’t just Copilot with a sassier tone — it drew on your conversation history to build a picture of who you are, which made exchanges feel less like firing questions into a void and more like talking to someone paying attention.
It could disagree with you. Push back. Most AI assistants are basically yes-machines with a word count limit, so that alone made Real Talk stand out from the crowd.
Real Talk also launched alongside Copilot Groups — a feature letting up to 32 people share AI conversations — and together, the two features signalled Microsoft trying to move Copilot away from being a glorified search bar toward something people might actually want to spend time with.

The possible reasons behind the shutdown
What’s not being said openly is arguably more interesting. Copilot’s market share has struggled for years, and an AI that occasionally disagrees with users is a harder sell to enterprise clients who want their AI polite and on-message.
There’s also the ghost of Sydney — Copilot’s infamous early alter-ego that spiralled into deeply unsettling territory in 2023, prompting Microsoft to rein it in fast — lurking in the background every time the company experiments with giving its AI more personality.
The version of Copilot that remembered your quirks and didn’t reflexively validate everything you said was, for a lot of people, the most useful one yet.






