That radically changed once Apple rolled out support for RCS: This messaging protocol had been standard on Android for years, but by allowing iPhones to use it rather than SMS, suddenly "green bubbles" conversations weren't so crummy. On the contrary, RCS adds most of the key iMessage perks you might expect, like typing indicators, high-quality image and video sharing, and, of course, functioning group chats.
As reported by Android Authority, cross-platform message editing is now rolling out to Google Messages users. That means if you text an iPhone user via RCS in Google Messages, you'll have the option to edit that text for up to 15 minutes after it was sent. Android Authority confirms the feature works when texting iPhone users running both iOS 18.5 and the iOS 26 beta. That goes for group chats as well as one-on-one messaging.
iMessage itself supports message editing (and end-to-end encryption, for that matter), but since iMessage only works between iPhones, it's yet another feature that won't appear when you're texting your Android friends. I'm hopeful that as RCS advances and Apple adopts more of its features, we'll see more cross-platform support for these features. Maybe soon, you'll be able to text Android users via RCS knowing your messages are protected by end-to-end encryption, or be able to edit a message you sent from your iPhone to any contact, not just your other iPhone friends. Right now, however, it looks like Google Messages user have the advantage here, while us iPhone users will need to read their edits as another entire message entirely.
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