Grammarly kills its perfectly good name to become ‘Superhuman’ — because nothing says originality like sounding exactly like every other AI startup


Grammarly is a quietly essential writing assistant that has saved countless writers (including most of us at Windows Central) from public humiliation. But Grammarly is no more. The company has decided that Grammarly just isn’t a cool enough name for the artificial intelligence age. Instead, it’s going to adopt the name of its newly acquired email app, Superhuman.

Normally, I’d advise against naming your products after something every other AI startup has probably thought of, but what do I know?

Superhuman? Huh?

Text reads Superhuman on purple background

Even the Superhuman logo looks sanitized (Image credit: Superhuman)

This, erm, bold new identity marks Grammarly‘s shift from a descriptive brand name that did exactly what it said on the tin (help with grammar!) into something that sounds like a self-help course or added DLC for one of Elon Musk’s surgically implanted neurolink chips. Side note: having Grammarly installed in my brain would be badass.

Superhuman is vague, corporate, sounds like an AI chatbot, and most importantly, means absolutely nothing. I’ve been using Grammarly for years, so I feel quite strongly about this, but don’t go back and check my articles to disprove that, because even Grammarly can’t save me sometimes. I’m the kind of person who types emails at full pelt for them to look like my cat walked across the keyboard, for Grammarly to swoop in and correct everything for me.

I’ve always recommended it, especially when they do their bonkers half-price deals, and it’s been quite clear from the name what it does. But now, in a desperate bid to eat at the cool kids’ AI table, the company has decided brand recognition is old hat.

Outlook. It promises to help you write better emails, schedule meetings, fetch information, and “make suggestions in the background.” It’s like Clippy, but with less charm.



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