Grammarly Isn’t Going Anywhere
Grammarly rebrands to ‘Superhuman,’ launches a new AI assistant
Grammarly changes its name to Superhuman – and its mission to AI wrangler
“Grammarly Wants to Be Superhuman
Via AI Secret
What’s happening: Grammarly just pulled a full identity heist. After acquiring Superhuman Mail in June and Coda last year, it’s ditching its own name and rebirthing as Superhuman, complete with a new AI agent suite called Superhuman Go. The classic grammar checker still exists, but now it’s just one plugin inside a larger “AI productivity OS.”
How this hits reality: Grammarly’s problem isn’t users; it’s use cases. ChatGPT and every “copilot” under the sun have turned writing help into a commodity. To stay relevant, Grammarly’s betting that “context-aware agents” across browsers and work apps will give it a bigger playground and a higher ceiling. But this makeover also screams midlife crisis: when your moat dries up, rename the castle.
Key takeaway: Grammarly didn’t buy Superhuman for synergy; it bought it for reincarnation.
What’s happening: Grammarly just pulled a full identity heist. After acquiring Superhuman Mail in June and Coda last year, it’s ditching its own name and rebirthing as Superhuman, complete with a new AI agent suite called Superhuman Go. The classic grammar checker still exists, but now it’s just one plugin inside a larger “AI productivity OS.”
How this hits reality: Grammarly’s problem isn’t users; it’s use cases. ChatGPT and every “copilot” under the sun have turned writing help into a commodity. To stay relevant, Grammarly’s betting that “context-aware agents” across browsers and work apps will give it a bigger playground and a higher ceiling. But this makeover also screams midlife crisis: when your moat dries up, rename the castle.
Key takeaway: Grammarly didn’t buy Superhuman for synergy; it bought it for reincarnation.”


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