I spotted this little gem a few hours ago while doom-scrolling on my phone. Marques Brownlee had posted a YouTube link about shutting down his Panels wallpaper app on X (yeah, we already broke down the whole saga over on our sister site if you want the full story).

Normally, I’d get kicked out to the YouTube app the second I tapped the thumbnail, but this time? The video just started rolling right there inside X, full-screen and everything.

Color me surprised.

Turns out this has been in the works for a while. Last month, tester Aaron P. posted a quick clip showing the feature already alive in the backend, complete with the YouTube logo slapped on the player. Fast-forward to today, and it’s actually live, at least on iOS.

Here’s what I’ve seen so far: when a post contains a straight YouTube link, you’ll notice a tiny YouTube icon tucked under the thumbnail in your timeline. Open the post and the same icon pops up top-left. Tap that, and it sends you to YouTube’s official X account (cute touch).

The playback itself mostly feels native; it expands, you get the usual scrubber, volume rocker, the works. Pause and unpause a few times, though, and you’ll catch flashes of the real YouTube player peeking through the edges. It’s a little rough around the corners, but it works.

Check it out in this clip:

Android users, sorry, you’re still getting yeeted over to the YouTube app like it’s 2023. No dice on that side yet. But hey, at least Android users can still play around with the new experience that rolled out a few days ago.

Honestly, this is one of those rare “why didn’t they do this sooner” moments. Let’s be real, X was never really going to match YouTube’s content scale, but letting creators drop their videos here without punishing viewers with app-switching friction is smart. Most people won’t even realize they’re watching a YouTube clip half the time; it just feels like another X video. That keeps eyes on the platform longer, keeps the algorithm happy, and gives creators one less excuse to avoid posting links.

Small feature, big quality-of-life win. If they polish the jank and bring it to Android soon, X just made timeline surfing a lot less annoying.

Dwayne Cubbins
1781 Posts

My fascination with Android phones began the moment I got my hands on one. Since then, I've been on a journey to decode the ever-evolving tech landscape, fueled by a passion for both the "how" and the "why." Since 2018, I've been crafting content that empowers users and demystifies the tech world. From in-depth how-to guides that unlock your phone's potential to breaking news based on original research, I strive to make tech accessible and engaging.