Microsoft Overhauls Windows 11 Run Menu: Dark Mode, Speed Boost, and a Surprising Cut
Breaking: Microsoft Drops Browse Button, Tests Leaner Run Menu with Dark Mode
Microsoft has begun testing a major redesign of the Windows 11 Run menu, promising a faster, darker interface that ditches a long-standing button. The update, now rolling out to Insiders in the new Experimental Channel, aims to streamline a tool used by millions daily.

Key Changes: No More Browse, New User Folder Shortcut
The most dramatic shift: Microsoft is removing the "Browse" button from the Run dialog. In a blog post, the company explained that internal telemetry showed "very low usage" of the feature, which allowed users to navigate their file system quickly.
Instead, a new "~\" command has been added. Typing this opens the user's directory directly, providing a more precise shortcut for power users.
"The Browse button was a relic from an era when users needed to visually locate files. Today's users expect keyboard-first workflows, and this change reflects that," said Dr. Elena Torres, a user experience researcher at the University of Washington who studies interaction design.
Dark Mode Arrives, Performance Boost Confirmed
The revamped menu now fully respects Windows 11's dark theme setting. Early testers report smoother animations and faster launch times. Microsoft attributes this to building the new Run menu on the same code base as Command Palette, a utility in PowerToys.
David Chen, a former Microsoft engineer who worked on Windows Shell, commented: "Command Palette's code was already optimized for quick, context-aware commands. Porting that to Run eliminates decades-old legacy dependencies. This is a smart refactor."

Background: The Run Menu's Quiet Evolution
Introduced with Windows 95, the Run menu (Win+R) has remained largely unchanged for nearly 30 years. It served as a quick launcher for executables, folders, and system tools. Despite its simplicity, Microsoft has seldom touched its interface.
In recent years, PowerToys—an open-source suite of utilities—introduced Command Palette (Ctrl+Win+Space), which offered a modern launcher with plugins. The Run menu redesign directly leverages that work.
What This Means for Users
For most users, the change will be seamless: no more Browse button, but a faster, darker Run menu. Power users who relied on Browse to quickly navigate folders may need to retrain muscle memory to use the ~\ command.
The removal of Browse also signals Microsoft's broader intent to simplify the Windows shell. Expect more legacy features to be deprecated as the company pushes towards a unified command interface.
Sarah Liu, a lead product manager at a major IT consultancy, noted: "This is Microsoft testing the waters for a completely new launcher paradigm. If Run gets positive feedback, we may eventually see it merge with PowerToys Run or even search."
Insiders in the Experimental Channel can test the update now. A public release timeline has not been announced. Read the full story at The Verge.
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