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Apple has finally fixed this annoying RCS texting quirk for Android users

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Why This Matters

Apple's iOS 27 beta 2 introduces native support for inline threaded replies and emoji reactions in RCS conversations, significantly improving cross-platform messaging between iPhone and Android users. This update addresses longstanding usability issues, making messaging more seamless and visually consistent across devices, and marks a step toward narrowing the feature gap between iMessage and Android messaging. These enhancements could pave the way for future features like message editing and unsending, further enriching the user experience in cross-platform chats.

Key Takeaways

Ryan Haines / Android Authority

TL;DR Apple’s iOS 27 beta 2 introduces native support for inline threaded replies, and emoji and photomoji reactions in cross-platform RCS conversations.

The update fixes a clunky issue where Android users would receive a separate text description of an emoji reaction instead of the emoji itself. Now, Android users will receive the proper emoji reaction.

Because these features rely on the newer RCS 2.7 Universal Profile standard, future iOS 27 updates could potentially introduce message editing and unsending.

Apple has taken another significant step toward narrowing the massive feature gap between iMessage and Android-iOS cross-platform texting. The company just rolled out iOS 27 beta 2, and in it, Apple has finally added native support for emoji reactions and inline replies for RCS conversations.

As Aaron Perris shared on X, iOS 27 beta 2 allows iPhone users to send inline threaded replies to specific RCS texts, mirroring the long-standing functionality in many messaging apps and services, including iMessage.

Further, Perris notes on X that iOS 27 beta 2 also finally fixes how emoji reactions appear in RCS conversations on the Android user’s end. Previously, when an iPhone user reacted to an RCS message, the Android recipient would see a clunky, annoying separate text message describing the emoji reaction. Now, when iPhone users react with an emoji in an RCS conversation, the reaction appears natively and properly to the Android user as an emoji reaction instead of the separate text description.

iPhone users can now also react with photomojis, and it is said to reflect properly on both ends.

These new additions come on the heels of Apple officially introducing default end-to-end encryption (E2EE) for cross-platform RCS chats, a crucial security update that rolled out to the masses with stable iOS 26.5. While that previous update finally fixed a glaring years-long security oversight, it still left users dealing with clunky interface mismatches and feature disparities, though these seem to be gradually getting fixed.

Because these new features (emoji reactions and inline replies) rely on the newer RCS 2.7 Universal Profile standard, the door is also open for other much-requested capabilities. The standard technically supports message editing and unsend, meaning Apple could very well introduce even more upgrades (catch-up features) as the iOS 27 beta cycle progresses toward its stable public release this fall. Since these are cross-platform features for RCS conversations, Android and iOS users can finally dream of having proper text conversations without feeling like they’re missing out due to platform lock-in.

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