Twitter’s famous blue bird is dead; on July 23, Elon Musk decided to rebrand the social network simply as X, and we’re frankly still getting used to it.
But why, exactly, is your Twitter app now a mysterious, confusing X? What other changes (or catastrophic blunders) does Elon Musk have in the pipeline? And what metaphorical rugs will be pulled from beneath our feet next?
The change from Twitter to X is more than just a knee-jerk rebrand, even if it feels that way. It’s already changing the way Twitter works, and Elon Musk has laid out a grand vision that could see it become more like an ‘everything’ app in the vein of China’s WeChat.
Whether that’s actually feasible in reality is another matter, but for now Twitter is changing more than just its name. Here are the changes that X has delivered beyond a new logo, and where it’s likely to go next. Hold on, this could be a rocky ride…
Why did Twitter change to X?
Twitter’s abrupt rebrand to X came out of the blue on July 23, causing widespread confusion among its 240 million global users. But the reasons, which Elon Musk had hinted at last year, eventually came to the surface.
The most succinct explanation came from Musk himself in the Tweet (or is that Xeet?) below. In it, he explains that X Corp (the company formerly known as Twitter) bought the social network “as an accelerant for X, the everything app.”
As Twitter moves towards that lofty goal, Musk says the Twitter name no longer makes sense – particularly with X Corp planning to add “the ability to conduct your entire financial world” on the app “in the months to come”.
While Twitter’s rebrand to X was more abrupt and, frankly, amateurish than anyone had expected, Musk previously hinted at the plans above in a Tweet (as they were known then) on October 4, 2022. In it, he stated simply that “buying Twitter is an accelerant to creating X, the everything app”.
Given that Musk is known for making outlandish statements, those claims were understandably treated with skepticism and Twitter carried on in blissful ignorance, while absorbing some wild changes that ranged from scrapping legacy blue checkmarks to the overnight introduction of rate limits.
But now Twitter has been given its most visible changes so far. The mobile app icons for iOS and Android are now X, while the browser version carries the same branding (despite still being at the usual twitter.com URL). Tweetdeck, the popular Twitter dashboard program, is now called XPro. Fujifilm could have some reservations about the name, considering its long-running X-Pro series.
All of these changes are pretty head-spinning, so here’s a breakdown of everything that’s changed on Twitter beyond its name and logo.
What’s new in X?
The X app and website are still, on the surface, effectively Twitter in more boring clothes. It’s still a horribly addictive place to spout opinions, observe flame wars, and get your hit of the latest news, memes and weird viral trends. But under the hood, there is almost constant change. Also, Elon Musk has turned Twitter’s old verification system on its head.
As you can see from X’s official list of changes by month, there have been dozens of changes since November 2022. That’s not including all of the many under-the-hood algorithm tweaks.
Most recently, on July 25, X Blue subscribers (who pay from $8 / £9.60 / AU$13 per month or $84 / £100.80 / AU$135 per year), were given the ability to download videos from X (below). Hilariously, subscribers have also given the option to hide their blue verification ticks, suggesting that the ticks are far from a badge of honor.