Twitter users rejoice after devs finally remove auto-crop feature

Twitter’s auto-cropping feature has been the bane of practically everyone’s existence for years. The developers have finally removed cropping on the platform as of May 5 though, and users are rejoicing.

Let’s be real: If you’ve been on Twitter even just once, you’ve probably been baited by the cropping feature. People have managed to figure out the algorithm to bait people into seeing something… unsavory once they tap into the full-screen image.

It’s also been a plague for artists. Sometimes the crop focuses on small subtext or irrelevant parts of the image, meaning those who might be interested in the full image keep scrolling on by.

Finally, after years of petitioning, users will finally get what they want ⁠— no more cropping; the feature has been removed on iOS and Android as of May 5.

no bird too tall, no crop too short

introducing bigger and better images on iOS and Android, now available to everyone pic.twitter.com/2buHfhfRAx

— Twitter (@Twitter) May 5, 2021

“No bird too tall, no crop too short. Introducing bigger and better images…now available to everyone,” the company wrote.

Of course, everyone has reacted in a “Is this on?” kind of way. From mega-popular Twitter artists to game developers, users are throwing up big pictures of their favorite pieces without having to worry about cropping.

There is a limit though. Twitter confirmed that images with a bigger aspect ratio than 2:1 will still be cropped, but it’s a nice change.

We heard Twitter crop is gone so, here goes pic.twitter.com/6XWZmDNyDU

— League of Legends (@LeagueOfLegends) May 5, 2021

ah, I sense twitter crop still has its limits 💀 pic.twitter.com/dphCKTHieV

— PJ 🍄 (@passionpeachy) May 5, 2021

Twitter crop is gone! Artists we will be held back no longer !! pic.twitter.com/J6SfXmTFzC

— Xiao Tong 🦋CTC (@Velinxi) May 5, 2021

Rip Twitter crop 🪦 pic.twitter.com/GAMYye48pc

— Moon 📸 (@LunarHaus) May 5, 2021

We do have to heed a warning to PC users too: You won’t have access to uncropped pictures just yet. You still have to click into the images to get the full view, so be careful out there.

But for those scrolling on mobile, you can enjoy Twitter’s best art ⁠— and memes ⁠— in their full glory, without even having to tap into a thread.

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