GNOME has launched version 50, completing the shift away from X11 in the GDM display manager after a postponement from GNOME 49. The release brings refinements to the shell, display management, file handling, and accessibility tools. Other desktops like Plasma and Xfce remain unaffected for their X11 sessions.
GNOME 50 arrived on March 19, 2026, continuing the project's Wayland-first strategy. A standout change is the outright removal of X11 support from GDM, which had been planned for GNOME 49 but delayed due to a bug preventing detection of /usr/share/xsessions. This time, GDM operates solely on Wayland, with no option to compile without Wayland support. Features like XDCMP and the system-wide X server, which relied on X11, have also been eliminated. However, other desktop environments such as Plasma and Xfce can still launch their X11 sessions via per-user X servers at login screens that support them. The GNOME Shell gains new controls for extending parental screen time limits directly from the interface and corrects tracking when idle inhibitors are active. A power mode indicator appears in the top bar for non-default profiles, and the volume slider snaps to 100% with over-amplification. Fixes address deleted default folders reappearing and password exposure in IM pre-edit fields. Display handling advances with stable variable refresh rates and fractional scaling in Mutter, previously experimental. HiDPI support extends to remote desktops, while color management adds HDR screen sharing, an SDR-native mode, and wp-color-management v2. Discrete GPU detection improves, including NVIDIA driver fixes. Nautilus, the Files app, improves path completion to be case-insensitive, loads thumbnails via the sandboxed Glycin library, reworks icon caching, and enhances the multi-file properties dialog with checkerboard backgrounds for transparent images. Accessibility sees Orca's preferences window redesigned for consistency, with global settings by default, automatic language switching, and Browse mode across all documents. Platform updates include new at-spi2-core signals for input tracking. Additional tweaks encompass fresh wallpapers, Loupe support for XPM and JPEG 2000, postponed session save/restore, GTK 4 dropping Librsvg, and Calendar enhancements like event attendees and arrow navigation. Users on rolling distributions like Arch Linux can expect updates soon, while Ubuntu 26.04 LTS and Fedora Workstation 44 will include it.