How React Native Blog improves Release Notes on React Native
Showing 20 of 22 articles (Page 1 of 2)
React Native just made the leap from mobile screens to VR headsets. Meta announced official support for Quest devices at React Conf 2025, letting developers build immersive experiences with the same codebase th...
React Native 0.84 just dropped with automatic performance wins for every app. No migration needed, no config changes required—just faster execution and lower memory usage out of the box.
React Native 0.83 just dropped with a historic first: zero breaking changes. The team is finally delivering on their promise of predictable, painless upgrades.
React Native just dropped its most significant release ever. Version 0.82 completely removes the Legacy Architecture, marking what the team calls 'the start of a new era' for mobile development.
React Native 0.81 just dropped with a game-changing performance boost: iOS builds up to 10x faster. But there's a catch that'll affect every Android developer.
React Native 0.77 just dropped with over 1,061 commits from 161 contributors. The team is bringing web-standard CSS properties to mobile and making a bold move to Swift for iOS templates.
Six years in the making, React Native 0.76 just dropped with the New Architecture enabled by default. This is the production-ready moment the mobile dev community has been waiting for.
React Native 0.71 just dropped with TypeScript as the default, and it's the biggest developer experience upgrade in years. If you're still wrestling with layout spacing or accessibility props, this changes ever...
React Native 0.70 just made Hermes the default JavaScript engine. This marks a major turning point for performance and developer experience across both iOS and Android.
React Native 0.69 just dropped with React 18 support and bundled Hermes. This is the release that finally bridges the gap between React's latest features and mobile development.
React Native 0.68 just dropped, and it's the first version where you can opt into the New Architecture. This is the milestone the community has been waiting for.
React Native 0.67 isn't just another version bump. The team has completely overhauled how they ship releases, and it's a masterclass in scaling open source.
React Native 0.66 just dropped with Android 12 and iOS 15 support, plus a game-changing fix that's been frustrating Android devs for years. Time to upgrade?
React Native 0.65 just dropped with performance gains that'll make you rethink your mobile architecture. The Hermes engine upgrade alone is delivering 20-50% improvements on CPU-intensive workloads at Facebook.
React Native 0.64 just brought Hermes to iOS, and it's a game-changer for app performance. The team is finally closing the gap between Android and iOS optimization.
React Native just fixed the two biggest complaints from mobile teams: cryptic error messages and interactions that scream 'this isn't a native app.'
React Native 0.62 just shipped with Flipper debugging built in by default. This release fundamentally changes how mobile developers debug cross-platform apps.
React Native's hot reloading was so broken that most developers just turned it off. The 0.61 release completely reimagined it from scratch.
React Native 0.60 just dropped with changes so significant, they're calling it a migration milestone. If you're still manually linking native modules, this changes everything.
React Native 0.59 just dropped with the biggest Android performance upgrade in years. If your app still feels sluggish compared to iOS, this changes everything.