Apple appears to be making Genmoji less of a one-shot guessing game in iOS 27. A new creation flow lets people describe changes after the first AI emoji appears.
MacRumors reports that the revamped Genmoji interface has more starting points. Users can begin with a text prompt, an existing emoji, a person, or an image from Photos.
After the first result, users can use a new “Describe a change” field. That lets them tweak the same Genmoji instead of starting over.
That is the important shift. Today, creating a custom emoji can feel like asking the system to roll the dice again. The reported iOS 27 version keeps the old base and lets people adjust details such as colors, objects, and style.
Genmoji gets closer to a real editor
The report says Genmoji results now lean toward a more consistent 3D cartoon look by default. Users can still ask for another style. For example, they can request a drawing or a sketch if the standard Apple emoji-style result is not the right fit.
MacRumors also says generation is faster and appears to use fewer system resources. It may drain less battery, too.
Apple has not posted a separate Genmoji-only announcement. However, its Apple Intelligence newsroom update says Genmoji quality is better and now lets users describe the changes they want to make.

Why this matters for iPhone users
Genmoji is one of Apple Intelligence’s most visible consumer features. It lives inside everyday messaging, where a small improvement can make the tool feel more useful.
If Apple can make the tool easier to steer, it becomes better for normal chats. It also feels less like a demo people try once.
The change also fits Apple’s broader iOS 27 AI push. The company says the new Apple Intelligence features are available for developer testing now. A public beta is coming next month, and a fall release is planned for supported devices.
It is another sign that Apple wants its AI features to feel native, not separate. The same challenge showed up in earlier Siri and Apple Intelligence rumors. Users do not just want AI features to exist. They want those features to save time without making the phone harder to use.