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    Home»Reviews»Microsoft’s own Windows ad shows Copilot giving wrong instructions
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    Microsoft’s own Windows ad shows Copilot giving wrong instructions

    techupdateadminBy techupdateadminNovember 17, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
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    Windows System Display settings menu
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    Even as someone who viscerally hates “AI” getting stuffed into every aspect of every device and service I use, I can see places where it’s helpful. For example, a conversational interface for my grandmother might mean she needs to call me less often for iPad tech support. Microsoft took the same angle for a recent Copilot ad… which bizarrely showed Copilot offering the wrong instructions.

    Alright, let’s set up the dominoes before Copilot knocks them down. In a promotional X/tweet on November 12th, Microsoft showed YouTuber UrAvgConsumer pretending to be my not-so-tech-savvy grandmother, who says “Hey Copilot, I want to make the text on my screen bigger” while looking at Windows 11 Settings. “Can you show me where to click to do that?” he asks, activating the new Copilot Vision feature.

    Copilot correctly highlights the Display portion of the menu. When the user prompts Copilot with “Can you show me what to click next,” the system points him to the Scale setting. And when asked what percentage is needed, it says “Let’s start by clicking 150 percent, which is the recommended size”… which is baffling because 150 percent is already selected in the video as the default for that particular laptop.

    UrAvgConsumer apparently ignores the stated instructions and manually clicks on 200 percent instead. “Boom, and we’ve instantly got bigger icons, bigger text, easier for grandma to see.”

    In a Copilot promotional video from Microsoft, the user ignores Copilot’s instructions to click a setting that’s already applied.

    Microsoft

    This is bewildering on many levels. One, it’s pretty darn misleading since the audio of Copilot’s instructions doesn’t match the user’s on-screen actions. As Windows Central points out, Copilot told the user to essentially do nothing. The user—perhaps being more tech-savvy than Copilot’s limited system—correctly changes the setting to make the Windows UI bigger and easier to see. It’s probably something he’s done on his own dozens of times before.

    I’ll play devil’s advocate and point out that Copilot successfully guided the user to the relevant section of the Settings menu and the individual setting they needed. Even someone like my grandma could fiddle with that percentage option until she found something she liked. But to continue in even-handed treatment, UI scaling isn’t quite the same thing as “making the text on my screen bigger.” A more relevant setting—especially for an older user—would be the Accessibility section of the same menu, where “Text size” is the very first item in that menu, complete with a slider and preview window that’d be even easier for a novice to understand… and wouldn’t re-scale the entire user interface.

    Windows 11 Accessibility text size settings menu

    Microsoft

    This fact has been pointed out by Twitter users so often that it’s been automatically highlighted in the “Readers added context” section of the page, along with a link to an official Microsoft support page that even my grandma could find by searching the web. This page is also the very first result on Bing if you search for “how to make text bigger in windows 11.” (I used Bing on the assumption that a novice user would be searching in Edge with no changes applied… which would still get better, faster, and more relevant results than using the LLM-powered Copilot.)

    Copilot failing in such a basic way isn’t all that surprising. The very nature of large language models means that results for identical queries can be inconsistent and even flat-out wrong. But the fact that Microsoft would choose to highlight such a glaring failure of its own system, apparently in the presence of a very experienced technology influencer who applied a different change entirely, is incredibly strange.

    Why wouldn’t Microsoft’s promotional team just re-record that video until they got the desired outcome? Assuming that UrAvgConsumer simply didn’t have the footage needed—possibly because this was a rapid-fire shoot for TikTok-style content—why not get the auto-generated Copilot audio to at least mention the 200 percent scaling option? Why would you choose to showcase something so glaringly wrong, specifically in an example of how that headline Copilot feature could help people?

    The most generous interpretation I can give of this situation is that it’s a result of marketers who aren’t that familiar with how Windows works for regular or advanced users. That would be embarrassing for anyone using a company’s own products, especially one with billions of users like Windows, but marketing/PR and tech support are not the same job. Fine. It’s also possible that we’re missing bits of back-and-forth conversation that were edited out to make the video shorter. Maybe Copilot did instruct UrAvgConsumer to click on 200 percent off-screen.

    Even so, it’s crazy to think that this made it through various levels of Microsoft bureaucracy to be put before eyeballs on Twitter and presumably other social platforms.

    Copilot giving Instructions Microsofts Shows Windows Wrong
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