In deep learning, it is usually assumed that the optimization process is conducted on a shape-fixed loss surface. Differently, we first propose a novel concept of deformation mapping in this paper to affect the behaviour of the optimizer. Vertical deformation mapping (VDM), as a type of deformation mapping, can make the optimizer enter a flat region, which often implies better generalization performance. Moreover, we design various VDMs, and further provide their contributions to the loss surface. After defining the local M region, theoretical analyses show that deforming the loss surface can enhance the gradient descent optimizers ability to filter out sharp minima. With visualizations of loss landscapes, we evaluate the flatnesses of minima obtained by both the original optimizer and optimizers enhanced by VDMs on CIFAR-100. The experimental results show that VDMs do find flatter regions. Moreover, we compare popular convolutional neural networks enhanced by VDMs with the corresponding original ones on ImageNet, CIFAR-10, and CIFAR-100. The results are surprising: there are significant improvements on all of the involved models equipped with VDMs. For example, the top-1 test accuracy of ResNet-20 on CIFAR-100 increases by 1.46%, with insignificant additional computational overhead.