Iconpackager Stardock -

Spoiler: Yes, but with caveats. Installation is painless via Stardock’s central hub, Object Desktop Manager. The software is lightweight—clocking in at under 40MB. No adware, no bloat, no sneaky registry miners. Stardock is old-school in the best way.

Note to Stardock: Please, please add a dark mode and modernize the preview window. That’s the only thing keeping this from a perfect score. iconpackager stardock

Stardock has maintained this software through two decades of OS upheaval. That loyalty deserves respect. For $9.99 (often on sale for $5), it’s a no-brainer for any desktop customizer. Spoiler: Yes, but with caveats

You can build your own icon sets using PNGs or ICOs. Drag and drop 50 images, map them to specific shell objects (e.g., "Folder - Open," "Drive - SSD"), and save the package. The batch conversion tool is surprisingly fast, resizing 256x256 PNGs to proper .ico formats in seconds. No adware, no bloat, no sneaky registry miners

Upon launching IconPackager, you’re greeted with a dual-pane interface that looks like it was designed for Windows 7. It’s functional, but let’s call it what it is: dated. The preview pane is small, and the menus feel clunky. However, don’t judge a book by its cover. Under the hood, this engine is rock solid. 1. One-Click Theme Application This is the headline feature. You download an .iconpackage file (from WinCustomize or DeviantArt), double-click it, and IconPackager takes over. Within three seconds, every system icon—from your hard drives to your control panel—transforms. No manual right-clicking, no "Change Icon" dialogs, no permission errors. The automation is flawless.

Rating: 4.5/5 Stars Time used: 7+ years (on and off since Windows 7) Introduction: Why Icons Matter Let’s be honest: Windows has never given users enough respect for desktop customization. Sure, you can change a wallpaper and tweak accent colors, but the core shell icons—Recycle Bin, This PC, Network, Folders—remain stubbornly dated or mismatched. Enter IconPackager , Stardock’s veteran utility. It has been around since the Windows 98 days, surviving Vista, 7, 8, 10, and now 11. But in an era where many tweaks have moved to PowerShell scripts and manual .dll patching, is a dedicated $9.99 icon manager still worth your time?