Google is preparing two long-requested upgrades for Google Messages on Wear OS, with code hints pointing to native emoji reactions and a new Mark as Read button for watch notifications. If these changes ship, the smartwatch experience will finally align with the convenient quick-actions Android phone users already enjoy.
What the Latest Wear OS Teardown Reveals for Messages
Strings uncovered in a recent Google Messages build for Wear OS reference a new MessageReactionsActivity along with accessibility descriptions such as “React with %1$s” and “Remove %1$s reaction.” In plain terms, that’s groundwork for tapping an emoji to acknowledge a message directly from your wrist. The wearable app already shows incoming reactions, but until now there’s been no way to send one back without pulling out your phone.

The app also includes a flag labeled enable_mark_as_read_on_wear_notification, signaling that a dedicated Mark as Read action should soon appear on Messages notifications for Wear OS. Gmail on Wear OS has offered a similar control for years, so this brings parity to Google’s core communication app.
As with any feature spotted in an app teardown, timing isn’t guaranteed. These references are strong signals, but Google can delay, rework, or pull functionality before public release. Still, given the maturity of these strings and Google’s recent push to unify its cross-device messaging experience, the odds look good.
Why Emoji Reactions Matter on a Watch for Quick Replies
On a small screen, speed trumps everything. Emoji reactions are the quickest way to acknowledge a message—thumbs-up for a received address, a check for confirmation, a heart for a photo—without dictation or tapping through a keyboard. It’s the ideal wrist gesture: one tap, message handled.
This also fits the broader shift to RCS messaging in Google Messages, which now counts over 1 billion monthly active users according to Google. Reactions are a popular RCS feature on phones; extending them to Wear OS simply closes the loop. Early indications suggest Photomojis—the personalized sticker-like reactions introduced on Android—will remain view-only on watches for now, which makes sense given resource and UI constraints.
The move arrives as Wear OS adoption continues to climb. After Google and Samsung relaunched the platform, Google said active Wear OS devices grew roughly 3x year over year. As more users rely on their watches for lightweight communication, tiny interaction upgrades can have outsized impact.

Mark As Read Could Tame Notification Overload
Message triage is where smartwatches earn their keep. A Mark as Read button on a notification lets you clear nonessential texts immediately, keeping your phone’s unread badge accurate and your attention focused. It’s a small control that reduces double-work: no more dismissing a watch alert only to open your phone later to clear the same message.
Industry studies consistently show that people field dozens of notifications every day. Wearables are meant to filter that torrent into quick glances and decisive taps. Bringing Messages in line with Gmail and other apps that already support Mark as Read on Wear OS streamlines that flow and encourages more consistent inbox hygiene.
How It Might Work on Your Wrist in Wear OS Messages
Expect reactions to appear as an overlay or bottom sheet in a conversation view or as a quick action on a message notification. The accessibility strings suggest a picker you can open, tap an emoji to apply, and tap again to remove—mirroring the phone experience. For Mark as Read, look for an extra button beside Reply or Mute on notification cards.
Compatibility will likely target Wear OS 3 and newer devices, including the Pixel Watch series and Samsung’s Galaxy Watch models. As usual with Google apps, rollout could be staged via a Play Store update and a server-side flag, meaning features may appear for some users before others even on the same version.
What to Watch Next as Google Tests Wear OS Updates
Keep an eye on beta builds of Google Messages and watch for subtle UI changes on your notifications. If Google follows its recent cadence, these features could surface within weeks, though broader availability may take longer. When they land, they’ll make glancing replies and inbox cleanup on Wear OS feel far more complete—and far more like the phone experience you already know.
