From across the open-plan office, Priya, the graphic designer, looked up. Her eyes were wide. “Arjun… why does my chat window look like a medieval monk just wrote me a message about the TPS report?”
The screen flickered. The corporate blue bled into a deep, oily purple. The gray backgrounds turned to matte black. The green “Online” status dots became pulsing, radioactive cyan. The font shifted to a jagged, cyberpunk monospace. He could almost hear a synthwave beat in the hum of his PC tower.
He enabled it.
He found a script called /emote_sync . The description was chillingly simple: Synchronizes theme with emotional state of the primary user. Experimental. Not for production.
Suddenly, he saw the truth.
It was that he’d seen his own face reflected in every single one of them.
He dove deeper. Theme: Ancient Archive . The interface transformed. The chat window became a scroll of yellowed parchment. The avatars turned into hand-drawn illuminated manuscripts. The send button became a quill. Each incoming message made a soft parchment crinkle sound. lan messenger themes
The fluorescent lights of the office hummed a low, monotonous funeral dirge for creativity. Arjun stared at his screen, the crisp, sterile interface of the corporate LAN messenger, “SwiftTalk,” glaring back at him. It was the same shade of lifeless corporate blue and institutional gray that every other workstation, every other form, every other soul seemed to exude. The default theme: “Arctic Standard.”