Automattic ships zoom-out editing, unified Query Loop controls, and a leaner block toolbar in the year’s biggest core update. In this news piece we go past the headline and into what actually matters when you sit down to do the work on a real site.
Why this matters
The WordPress ecosystem moves fast, and it is easy to act on a change before understanding its trade-offs. We tested this on production-scale sites so you do not have to learn the hard way.
Always test major changes on a staging site first. A five-minute clone can save you hours of downtime.
How to get started
Start small and measure. The steps below cover the essentials without turning a quick task into an afternoon.
- Back up the site (files and database) before you change anything.
- Apply the change on staging and confirm nothing regresses.
- Measure the before/after — load time, errors, and Core Web Vitals.
The bottom line
For most sites this is worth doing after a quick staging test. The wins are real, and the risk is manageable when you follow the steps above.
Elena has been building and breaking WordPress sites for over a decade. She leads editorial at WPInsider, focusing on core development, performance, and the future of the block editor.