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Marathon’s Confusing UI Is a Strength – Bungie Shouldn’t Water It Down, Opinion

“Players aren’t designers,” says Ben Sledge. Marathon’s abstruse, diegetic UI fits its capitalist apocalypse – and sanding down its rough edges could ruin its identity.

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Marathon’s Confusing UI Is a Strength – Bungie Shouldn’t Water It Down, Opinion

 

Bungie changed Marathon’s implant icons after fan complaints. But one writer argues the frictional design is the game’s strongest asset – and smoothing it risks generic shooter territory.

“Players aren’t designers,” says Ben Sledge. Marathon’s abstruse, diegetic UI fits its capitalist apocalypse – and sanding down its rough edges could ruin its identity.

Marathon has something about it. For a while, I couldn’t put my finger on exactly what made it appeal to me where most extraction shooters didn’t. The gunplay is great, but so is Escape From Tarkov. Arc Raiders didn’t grip me the same way. So how did Marathon immediately slip a neon green hook under my skin?


🔧 The Icon Change – What Happened?

BeforeAfter
Slick but confusing icons that fit Marathon’s diegetic universeGeneric icons that don’t match the existing design language
Players had to study them to understand what each implant didStill need to hover to know what each implant does – no readability improvement
Icons felt like part of the worldIcons feel like a compromise, pleasing no one

“Instead of the slick-but-confusing designs that felt a part of this universe, we’ve got a bunch of icons that don’t make sense within Marathon’s existing design language.” To make things worse, there is no discernible improvement to readability.

The core argument: Players wanted clarity. They got icons that are distinct from the game’s art style but still require hovering to understand. Nobody wins – immersion is lost, and usability isn’t meaningfully improved.


🧠 Players Aren’t Designers – And That’s Okay

There are things developers should concede to players: improving queue times, rebalancing overpowered weapons, reducing playlist overlap (which Bungie did, to universal praise). But UI design is different.

“Players aren’t designers. They haven’t created the mood boards, sketched out icons, and pored over every last detail. They just want to be able to loot quicker.”

 

 

Mr2

Fans imagined something readable: a skull for “Thick Skull,” a hand with a thumbs up for “Helping Hands.” Like a Fallout Pip Boy upgrade. But they forget: in Marathon, you’re not a player. You’re a consciousness uploaded to an organic shell in order to extract profit from Tau Ceti’s swamps and facilities. The frictional design is intentional.


⚡ Why Rough Edges Matter

Risk of SmoothingBenefit of Friction
Generic shooter identityUnique, memorable aesthetic
Loss of immersionDiegetic storytelling through UI
Players treat icons as pure functionIcons become fragments of lore

“Right now, the frictional design is one of Marathon’s strongest selling points. This is a Soulslike where opponents are bosses and implants are tiny fragments of storytelling.”

 

 

You wouldn’t tell Miyazaki to write a linear novelization of Dark Souls’ story. So why ask Bungie to water down Marathon’s identity? If Bungie keeps filing down rough edges to give players a smoother experience, Marathon becomes just another shooter. That’s a worse fate than any confusing icon.


💬 Community Reaction – Mixed but Passionate

The implant icon change was requested by fans who found inventory management finicky. Bungie listened and acted quickly. But the result has split opinion:

  • Pro change camp: Inventory readability is more important than immersion.

 

  • Anti change camp (including the author): The unique design language is what sets Marathon apart. Water it down, and you lose the game’s soul.

 


💪 BuyCarry Team’s Take

We help players master difficult games – including Marathon’s confusing systems. We’ve seen clients struggle with the implant icons. We’ve also seen them fall in love with the game’s unique atmosphere.

What we agree with:

  • Friction is not a bug; it’s a feature. Marathon’s opacity is intentional. It rewards attentive players.
  • The new icons don’t solve the core problem. You still have to hover. So nothing was gained, but immersion was lost.
  • Bungie should trust its design vision. Not every fan request should be implemented.

What we’d add:

  • There is a middle ground: tooltips can be clearer without changing icon art style.
  • Bungie could offer an optional “accessibility mode” for UI clarity – but keep the default as intended.
  • The author is right to worry: death by a thousand cuts is real in live service games.

For our clients:

  • Confused by Marathon’s UI? We offer coaching to help you understand implants, loadouts, and inventory management.
  • Want the immersion without the headache? Our boosters handle the grindy parts while you enjoy the atmosphere.

Final verdict: A thoughtful, passionate opinion. Marathon’s identity is its greatest asset. Bungie should be careful not to sand it away.

🎯 Want to master Marathon’s deep systems without losing your mind? Our coaching and boosting services are here to help.

🎮 Our Marathon Services


❓ FAQ – Marathon UI & Design Identity

Q1: What UI change did Bungie make?

A: They changed the implant icons after fan complaints that they were too hard to read at a glance.

Q2: Why does the author think it’s a mistake?

A: Because the new icons don’t match Marathon’s design language, still require hovering to understand, and sacrifice immersion without improving usability.

Q3: What does “frictional design” mean?

A: Design that intentionally creates friction (e.g., confusing icons, obscure lore) to reinforce the game’s atmosphere and reward dedicated players.

Q4: Are there any UI changes that are good?

A: Yes – Bungie also removed playlist overlap between ranked and Cryo Archive, which improved queue times. That change was widely praised.

Q5: Should Bungie revert the icon change?

A: The author argues yes. But a middle ground (optional accessibility mode) might satisfy both camps.

Q6: Can BuyCarry help me understand Marathon’s systems despite the confusing UI?

A: Absolutely – coaching, inventory guides, and loadout optimization. Contact us.

Source: Ben Sledge, GamesRadar+ – May 11, 2026.