Summary, Dev Chat, November 26, 2025

Start of the meeting in SlackSlack Slack is a Collaborative Group Chat Platform https://slack.com/. The WordPress community has its own Slack Channel at https://make.wordpress.org/chat/., facilitated by @benjamin_zekavica 🔗 Agenda post.

Announcements 📢

6.9 Release Candidaterelease candidate One of the final stages in the version release cycle, this version signals the potential to be a final release to the public. Also see alpha (beta). 3 is now available!

WordPress 6.9 Release Candidate 3 is now available for download and testing.
Further information you can find here.

6.9 Release Day Timeline Shift

Please note that the release preparation timeline for WordPress 6.9 has been adjusted.
A revised schedule is now in place, aligned with the State of the Word on December 2.
A detailed overview of the updated timeline is available here.

6.9 Dev Notesdev note Each important change in WordPress Core is documented in a developers note, (usually called dev note). Good dev notes generally include a description of the change, the decision that led to this change, and a description of how developers are supposed to work with that change. Dev notes are published on Make/Core blog during the beta phase of WordPress release cycle. Publishing dev notes is particularly important when plugin/theme authors and WordPress developers need to be aware of those changes.In general, all dev notes are compiled into a Field Guide at the beginning of the release candidate phase.

For more detailed information, see the following WordPress 6.9 Dev Notes:

Forthcoming releases 🚀

6.9 Timeline

WordPress 6.9 is planned for December 2, 2025.

Call for Testing 

The Test Team invites testing and feedback on the following upcoming blockBlock Block is the abstract term used to describe units of markup that, composed together, form the content or layout of a webpage using the WordPress editor. The idea combines concepts of what in the past may have achieved with shortcodes, custom HTML, and embed discovery into a single consistent API and user experience. editor features:

Discussions 💬

Browser Support Policy – Clearer Front-end vs. Adminadmin (and super admin) Rules

Recent issues, including #64266 and #64015, highlighted that it’s not always clear which browsers need to be supported in the WordPress Admin and which ones should be supported on the front end. As block themes and FSE generate more front-end output, clearer guidance would help set expectations.

@joedolson will draft a proposal on the CoreCore Core is the set of software required to run WordPress. The Core Development Team builds WordPress. blogblog (versus network, site) to gather broader feedback, with support from @desrosj.

#6-9, #core, #dev-chat