I was scrolling, trying to find a simple, unpretentious clock, and instead hit the existential wall. It wasn’t the clock that failed; it was the whole feed. Ad after ad, sponsored post after sponsored post, selling me identical concepts of ‘elevated living.’ The travel bag, the memory foam mattress, the direct-to-consumer razor-all bathed in the same muted, slightly bruised pastel palette. Peach, sage, oat milk beige. Everything curated to look like expensive air. Everything sounded like it was whispering the same three words:
You are adequate.
Simulation
Authenticity
And I stopped, staring at the screen for maybe six seconds, realizing the horrifying truth: I wasn’t experiencing choice; I was experiencing a simulation of choice. Every ‘disruptive’ brand had completed the loop and arrived back at the mean. They didn’t start unique; they started as a spreadsheet of least-objectionable design elements, optimized for maximum click-through among the widest possible demographic.
Blandcore: The Optimized Void
This isn’t minimalism. Minimalism requires intent, austerity, and a deliberate elimination of noise. This, this endless stream of soft-focus uniformity, is
Blandcore. It’s the visual equivalent of airport ambient music-designed to fill the void without ever capturing attention. It’s what happens when you treat human desire like a mathematical problem to be solved, when you optimize the entire customer journey until every point of friction, every sharp edge, every element of actual
character is sanded down until it’s
