Last year, Google began rolling out RCS, its enhanced chat solution for Android devices. While not technically new (or specifically Google's), this was the first time the service was being attempted on a wide-scale by someone which as much clout and market reach as Google. Suffice to say, there was a lot of excitement online.

Unfortunately, Google's fairly slow region-based roll-out meant that not everyone could access it outside of places like the U.S., Canada, the U.K., and France. An unreliable hack emerged that allowed some users to switch on RCS outside of those regions, but Google is now officially cutting off that route at the end of this month:

As per a Google community manager:

Last year we rolled out the ability for users to enable chat features in a number of regions, including the U.S., the UK, France, and Mexico. As we prepare to bring chat features to more regions, users who have gotten chat features through unsupported workarounds where chat features aren't available yet will see them disabled by the end of February. For these users, chat features will be disabled for all versions of the app, including older versions.

Let's face it, this was always going to happen. There's probably a reason Google hadn't yet enabled chat features in those regions, and it wasn't just for the fun of it. It's not like Google isn't planning to bring RCS to those regions eventually. The community manager making this announcement even states that Google is working on it ASAP. It'll be ready someday.

But today is probably not that day.

What is RCS messaging, and why is it important to Android?