Few mainstream apps have been remade as thoroughly as X since the 2022 takeover that ended its life as Twitter. Verification became a paid Premium perk rather than an identity check, free API access was withdrawn, and trust-and-safety staffing was cut sharply, with much moderation work shifting to crowd-sourced Community Notes. Underneath, the product is recognisable: a fast, public, text-first feed where events surface minutes after they happen.
Deciding whether to install it now means weighing that speed against the platform's current character. Nothing matches X for breaking news, live sport, and following specific voices in real time. But the Play Store listing carries a Mature 17+ rating for good reason, since adult content is explicitly permitted under platform rules, and public posts feed the training of xAI's Grok models unless you switch that off. Below we cover what works and what to disable first.
Following breaking news and live events
During elections, disasters, and transfer deadline day, X is still where information appears first, straight from journalists, officials, and eyewitnesses. Verifying what you read is increasingly your job, but for raw speed no rival app comes close.
Tracking specific people, not topics
The Following tab shows a chronological feed of only the accounts you chose, and Lists let you build separate feeds per subject. Used this way, X functions as a precise reader rather than an algorithmic slot machine.
Building an audience in public
Writers, developers, and founders still treat X as the default place to publish short-form thoughts and get replies from their field. Premium subscribers can post long-form articles and receive a share of ad revenue on their posts.
Two feeds: For You and Following
The algorithmic For You tab surfaces posts from strangers based on engagement; the Following tab is strictly chronological and limited to your follows. Which one you live in largely determines your experience of the whole platform.
Community Notes
Contributor-written context notes appear beneath misleading posts when raters across political viewpoints agree they are helpful. The system is genuinely novel and often effective, though notes can arrive hours after a false post has already travelled.
Premium tiers
Paid plans add the blue checkmark, post editing, longer posts, reduced ads, and eligibility for creator payouts. The checkmark now signals a subscription, not a verified identity, a distinction worth internalising before trusting any account.
Grok built in
xAI's chatbot sits in its own tab, answering questions with access to current posts on the platform. It is conversationally capable, and its training relationship with your data is covered in the privacy section below.