Microsoft, let Cortana come home already. Copilot can keep the spreadsheets, but fans deserve the AI assistant with actual personality

Lenovo ThinkPad with the Microsoft Cortana logo and the text "bring her back."
(Image credit: Microsoft | Future | Edited with Gemini)

Hey Microsoft, it’s time to loosen the collar a bit and bring Cortana back into the room. Not as a full Copilot replacement, not as some grand rebrand, but as an optional persona for your AI agent.

A little fan service never hurt anyone, and frankly, Windows could use a bit more personality these days.

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Cortana was one of the few moments where Microsoft actually let itself be fun. She wasn’t just an assistant, she was a wink to Halo fans, a nod to Windows Phone loyalists, and a rare example of Microsoft showing that it understood its own culture. Then Windows Phone died, and Cortana was treated like a character written out of a TV show because the writers got bored. One day she was there, the next she was “pivoted to productivity scenarios,” which is corporate-speak for “we ghosted her.”

Fast forward to 2026, and we’ve got Copilot. It’s fine. It’s clean. It’s enterprise-friendly. It’s the AI equivalent of a well‑pressed button‑down shirt. I like the icon, and the branding works for the folks who spend their days in Excel and Teams meetings. But for the rest of us, the people who actually enjoy a little flavor in our tech, Copilot feels like ordering a plain bagel when you know full well an everything bagel exists.

So here’s the pitch. Keep Copilot as the default. Let the suits have their productivity‑optimized, synergy‑aligned, quarterly‑earnings‑approved assistant. But give the rest of us a toggle in Settings that says “Choose your AI persona,” and let Cortana be one of the options. Voice, avatar, icon, the whole thing. You already let people pick system themes, accent colors, lock screen styles, and even the color of their mouse cursor.

Letting users pick their assistant’s personality isn’t exactly a moonshot.

All Cortana wants to do is help Windows 11 users. (Image credit: Microsoft | Future | Edited with Gemini)

And yes, it would take some work. Licensing, approvals, maybe a few meetings where someone inevitably asks, “But what about brand consistency?” Yet these small gestures are the kind of things that build goodwill. They’re the things fans talk about. They’re the things that make Windows feel like a platform with history instead of a product line that keeps trying to forget its past.

If anything, Cortana makes more sense now than she ever did. Back in the Windows Phone era, she was a clever idea trapped inside limited tech. Today, with LLMs and multimodal models powering everything from your search bar to your toaster, Cortana could finally be the assistant she was meant to be.

And if Halo ever gets its footing again (a big IF, to be honest), the cross‑promo potential practically writes itself. Imagine the marketing: “Cortana is back, and this time she actually works.”

How dare you, sir! Don't besmirch her name! (Image credit: Daniel Rubino)

Microsoft clearly knows how to have fun when it wants to. The Ugly Sweater campaign is a yearly highlight. The Clippy Easter egg in Copilot was a delightful surprise. You don’t need to turn Windows into a carnival, but sprinkling in a little personality goes a long way.

After fifty years, the platform has earned the right to smile once in a while.

So go ahead, Microsoft. Let Copilot stay the responsible adult in the room. But give us the option to bring Cortana back as the cool aunt who shows up with inside jokes and a bit of nostalgia. It won’t break the brand. It won’t confuse the enterprise crowd. It’ll just make Windows feel a little more like home for the people who’ve stuck with it through every era, every reboot, and every “this time we’re serious” redesign.

And honestly, after everything Windows users have endured, letting us have Cortana back feels like the least you could do.

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What do you think? Should Microsoft let users pick Cortana as their AI persona, or is Copilot enough for you? Drop your thoughts below and tell us whether you’d switch back to Cortana the second the toggle appears in Settings.


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Daniel Rubino
Editor-in-chief

Daniel Rubino is the Editor-in-Chief of Windows Central. He is also the head reviewer, podcast co-host, and lead analyst. He has been covering Microsoft since 2007, when this site was called WMExperts (and later Windows Phone Central). His interests include Windows, laptops, next-gen computing, and wearable tech. He has reviewed laptops for over 10 years and is particularly fond of Qualcomm processors, new form factors, and thin-and-light PCs. Before all this tech stuff, he worked on a Ph.D. in linguistics studying brain and syntax, performed polysomnographs in NYC, and was a motion-picture operator for 17 years.

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