Despite their importance in many biological, ecological and physical processes, microorganismal fluid flows under tight confinement have not been investigated experimentally. Strong screening of Stokelets in this geometry suggests that the flow fields of different microorganisms should be universally dominated by the 2D source dipole from the swimmers finite-size body. Confinement therefore is poised to collapse differences across microorganisms, that are instead well-established in bulk. Here we combine experiments and theoretical modelling to show that, in general, this is not correct. Our results demonstrate that potentially minute details like microswimmers spinning and the physical arrangement of the propulsion appendages have in fact a leading role in setting qualitative topological properties of the hydrodynamic flow fields of micro-swimmers under confinement. This is well captured by an effective 2D model, even under relatively weak confinement. These results imply that active confined hydrodynamics is much richer than in bulk, and depends in a subtle manner on size, shape and propulsion mechanisms of the active components.