I rarely use "Reject and Edit" from the Suggested Edits review queue, but just now I did it for the first time in a while and saw that it generated this rejection message:
This edit did not correct critical issues with the post - view the revision history to see what should have been changed.
This seems to be complaining that the rejected edit was too minor, which is entirely at odds with our current understanding that there's no such thing as a "too minor" edit. And it presumes that I've actually fixed "critical issues" after doing a Reject and Edit. In the linked case, I certainly didn't; I rejected an edit that incorrectly attempted to fix the capitalization of a library name, and fixed it correctly instead, but nobody's ability to understand the question hinged on this. The rejection message is confusing and wrong, and given that we're meant to be embracing good-but-minor edits now, I can't really imagine any circumstance in which it would be appropriate.
Should we just scrap the message?