KDE Union Style Engine Nears Public Debut in Plasma 6.7
The KDE project announced today that its unified styling engine, Union, is on track for inclusion in the upcoming Plasma 6.7 release, expected mid-June 2025. The engine, which aims to consolidate all of KDE's application styling technologies into a single system, has reached a milestone where its Breeze implementation is nearly indistinguishable from the original.
Arjen Hiemstra, the lead developer behind Union, confirmed that extensive testing is underway. "We have tested with a bunch of applications and made sure that any differences were fixed," Hiemstra said. "We are at a stage where we need to get Union into the hands of more people."
Background
Union is a project first introduced by Hiemstra in February 2025. It was created to replace multiple separate styling systems used across KDE applications—such as QtQuick Controls 1, 2, and Kirigami—with a single, unified approach.

The current implementation focuses on Breeze, KDE's default visual style. According to Hiemstra, the fidelity is so high that it's "very hard to distinguish whether or not you are running the Union version."
What This Means
For users, Union promises a more consistent visual experience across KDE applications, regardless of the underlying framework. Developers will benefit from a single styling API, reducing maintenance overhead and simplifying theme creation.
KDE developers are currently debating whether Union will be enabled by default in Plasma 6.7. "Discussion is currently ongoing whether we will enable it by default, but even if not there will be a way to try it out," Hiemstra noted. The feature will at least be available as an opt-in for early adopters.
The introduction of Union also opens the door for third-party style contributors. Hiemstra called for "interested people creating new styles," which could diversify the KDE look-and-feel ecosystem.
Next Steps
The KDE team expects to finalize the default-setting decision before the release of Plasma 6.7. Meanwhile, users are encouraged to test the Union branch and report issues. Read more about Union's genesis in the earlier introduction from February 2025.
Related Articles
- React Native 0.83: What You Need to Know About the Latest Upgrade
- Everything You Need to Know About the April 2026 Google System Updates
- Python 3.15: A Deep Dive into the Most Impactful New Features
- Stack Overflow Co-Founder Issues Urgent Warning to AI Companies: Protect the Human Communities That Fuel Your Models
- Decoding the Diminishing Power of Economic Sanctions: A Guide Using the US-Iran Conflict
- Meta Expands Liquid Glass UI: WhatsApp In-Chat Redesign in Development
- 10 Key Updates in Safari Technology Preview 243 You Should Know
- Revamping Search Infrastructure for Resilience in GitHub Enterprise Server