I think you have this backwards; the "removed during grace period" feature was sort of an artifact of how edits coalesce during the grace period - at one time, [undoing the edit made it disappear from history entirely!](https://meta.stackexchange.com/questions/133301/undone-edits-disappear-from-revision-history) This is a sort of compromise between not junking up the revision history and not confusing people about what happened. But rollbacks are special. They're intentionally noisy. And, yeah, that's not really much of an answer. But that's the best I can offer; this is how the system was implemented 10 years ago, and back then someone (lookin' at you, Jarrod...) decided that "edit" and "rollback" should be distinct, and they've remained distinct ever since; as a result, edits coalesce within a grace period; rollbacks do not. In effect, rollbacks never suffered from the "gaslighting" problem that we had to patch over with edits - they're *always* explicit about what was done. This can actually be rather handy at times; if you *want* to avoid the grace period swallowing up an edit, you can make the edit and then revert via rollback to ensure that your changes remain in the revision history. And if you think *that's* crazy... [It gets even weirder](https://meta.stackexchange.com/questions/41953/could-we-be-permitted-to-provide-a-reason-for-rolling-back)