So, Stack Overflow changed, and we have the (oh-so-familiar) chorus of "hating the redesign" and "how can I make it look like it used to" that any large website can come to expect with a style change. I'll just make it clear that despite my own (hopefully constructive) criticism, I'm happy that the look and feel of Stack Overflow is being tweaked.
It's important to stay current.
What is clear is that the redesign took a substantial number of users by surprise. This has lead to a lot of frustration of the type detailed above. I think that those involved in the rollout of this change should be asking what went wrong and work a process that makes change less abrupt.
Yes, this whole redesign was tested here on meta. I wasn't aware of it, and despite being a relatively regular meta user, the changes went over my head. Meta is a different site. It looks different. I wasn't lucky enough to spot any kind of suggestion that the changes on meta were part of a larger process, and I'd bet that I wasn't alone.
I'd suggest that for subsequent "big-bang" design rollouts perhaps a site mirror (or a means of previewing the changes on the main site in a non-permanent fashion) be set up to showcase the changes, and banner announcements inform all stakeholders that the change is coming and invite them to the site mirror/use style preview controls to provide their opinion. This way, rather than imagining the changes to one website applied to another, users get a concrete look at the designers' vision in the context in which they will use it.
Meta is a different site. It looks different and people don't interact with it in the same way that they do with the main site. Correlating change here on meta with the main site isn't easy.