Head in Hands Frustratingly Inept
I pay four hundred dollars a year for Ghost(Pro), and somehow I spend half my time just trying to make sure my own posts are visible.
How is that even real. How is that a thing in 2026. This platform markets itself as a “professional publishing system,” but every week I’m wrestling with the UI like it’s a cursed relic from a forgotten civilization.
Every basic action — publish a post, confirm it’s public, make sure it didn’t get buried under some invisible draft state — turns into a multi-hour scavenger hunt. I shouldn’t need an AI assistant to figure out where the hell “Publish” is, or why “Draft” shows up in three different places with three different meanings, or why the sidebar looks like a tax form designed by a committee of sleep-deprived interns.
And the worst part?
None of this is advanced. None of this is “power user” stuff.
It’s the absolute bare-minimum functionality any publishing platform should get right:
Write
Publish
Confirm it’s live
Move on with your life
Ghost(Pro) turns that into a full-time job.
The whole experience feels like a slow-motion collapse — a product that wants to be sleek and modern but keeps tripping over its own interface. A platform that charges premium prices while delivering the ergonomics of a malfunctioning vending machine.
If there were a post-apocalyptic wasteland for bad UX decisions, Ghost(Pro) would be sitting on a throne made of broken toggles and mislabeled menus.








