News

We’re seeing this Google Maps logo change widely rolled out on Android (version 25.21) and iOS (25.22). It has yet to be updated on maps.google.com.
Google’s new ‘G’ logo appeared on stage during the I/O 2025 keynote, and is now live in more apps and the web. The new logo made its debut with the Google app on Android and iOS last week ...
Why did Google change its logo?Nobody seems to know.Presumably the people at Google know, but they’re not telling.The last time Google’s brand identity made a change like this, the company was ...
In 2015, Google announced their new look with a blog post explaining: ‘This isn’t the first time we’ve changed our look and it probably won’t be the last, but we think today’s update is ...
It's the first major change to the Google logo since 2015, according to 9To5Google. The new logo made its official debut with the beta version of Android 16.8, which went live on Monday.
Previous Perspective Google's previous big logo change in 2015 brought in the Product Sans typeface and now-recognizable color-blocked "G" icon, trading out the blue background lowercase "g.".
Google previously updated its main “Google” logo to the Product Sans typeface on September 1, 2015. At that time, the “G” icon was also introduced with solid segments in the company’s ...
Google hasn’t said anything about the other apps, and they haven’t been updated yet, or rather, the latest Google Maps update hasn’t changed the logo at all. More as we have it.
This is the first major change to Google’s logo since September 2015, when the tech giant introduced a flatter, sans-serif typeface and a more modern look for its full six-letter wordmark.
Google has updated its multi-coloured ‘G’ logo, marking the first major update to the brand’s design in nearly a decade. Billions of users will begin to notice a change to the Google icon ...
Google said at the time that the rebrand was intended to make the logo suitable “for a world of seamless computing across an endless number of devices and different kinds of inputs (such as tap, type ...
Google said at the time that the rebrand was intended to make the logo suitable “for a world of seamless computing across an endless number of devices and different kinds of inputs (such as tap ...