Introducing
The Slant team built an AI & it’s awesome
Find the best product instantly
Add to Chrome
Add to Edge
Add to Firefox
Add to Opera
Add to Brave
Add to Safari
Try it now
4.7 star rating
0
What is the best alternative to Firefox Nightly?
Ad
Ad
Safari
All
13
Experiences
Pros
5
Cons
7
Specs
Top
Pro
Works elegantly in OSX
The rendering of the pages and the browser compatibility with OSX works smoothly, when compared to other browsers. Also you get very high battery life with Safari, when compared to Chrome.
See More
Top
Con
OSX only
Apple dropped Windows support after Safari 5.
See More
Top
Pro
Extremely fast
See More
Top
Con
Does NOT block Ads
Doesn't block ads, unlike browsers like Brave and Vivaldi.
See More
Top
Pro
Sleek design
– No distraction stuff like favicons in tabs, all that borders, bevels and embosses in panels like in other browsers, no ugly shaped tabs. – Neat adress bar. – Good looking start “show all tabs” screen.
See More
Top
Con
Poor support for new web technologies
Safari usually takes its time when it comes to adopting new and useful web technologies meaning that the user gets an inferior experience compared to other modern browsers.
See More
Top
Pro
iCloud syncing
Tabs, passwords, bookmarks and, history all sync across devices.
See More
Top
Con
Proprietary
While Safari er is currently available gratis (without monetary charge) on Mac OS X, it is currently not libre (meaning that it does not allow users to view the source code used to create, to modify that code, or to redistribute modifications) and is therefore neither free nor open-source software.
See More
Top
Pro
Safari uses Webkit, a great open source web engine
Webkit is very light compared to Blink, renders web pages at an incredible speed, great CSS support and is also constantly evolving.
See More
Top
Con
Outdated Rendering engine
All other browsers and toolkits (Qt/GTK) have shifted to Googles Blink-fork of KHTML/Webkit so Apple is currently the only main contributor left.
See More
Top
Con
Terrible support for open source formats like .VP9 or .ogg
Apple does not support open source formats. Instead, they use H.264 and H.265.
See More
Top
Con
Even on OSX not the best Experience
Video controls are bad esp. on youtube. Only few browser extensions.
See More
Specs
Platforms:
macOS, iOS, iPadOS
License:
Proprietary
Based On:
N/A
Price:
Free
See All Specs
Hide
See All
Experiences
Get it
here
430
157
Lynx
All
5
Experiences
Pros
4
Specs
Top
Pro
Oldest web-browser still in general use
Lynx was first released in 1992. Using it is one of the best hands-on ways to understand the history of the Web.
See More
Top
Pro
Lightweight and lower ram usage than Chrome
Chrome uses like 600+MB of ram just for facebook and an adblocker and idm extension, but lynx runs on command so it's a lot better if you want results quickly.
See More
Top
Pro
Still under active development
Lynx offers surprising compatibility with current WWW standards, including SSL/TLS.
See More
Top
Pro
Naturally well-suited to accessibility tools
Being a text-based browser, Lynx is easy to operate using text-to-speech or Braille tools for visually-impaired users.
See More
Specs
Platforms:
Unix-like, DOS, Windows
License:
OpenSource
Based On:
N/A
Browser Engine:
libwww
Hide
Free
92
16
Ghostery Browser
All
10
Experiences
Pros
4
Cons
5
Specs
Top
Con
No add-ons support
There is no add-ons support, except on desktop platforms.
See More
Top
Pro
Built-in ad blocker
The Ghostery ad blocker blocks all ads so that you don't get annoyed.
See More
Top
Con
Outdated search engines
It uses the Clickz search engine as a search engine which was already discontinued in 2020.
See More
Top
Pro
No tracking
See More
Top
Con
Just like Ghostery this is software by an ad agency
See More
Top
Pro
No telemetry on mobile
There is no telemetry on mobile, except if you go to their support page and start a tutorial.
See More
Top
Con
Ghostery ad blocker doesn't block all, but "selective" and sends on personal data.
Since July 2018, with version 8.2, Ghostery shows advertisements of its own to users.[23] Burda claims that the advertisements do not send personal data back to their servers and that they do not create a personal profile.[24] (Wikipedia)
See More
Top
Pro
Lightweight
See More
Top
Con
Way too similar to Mozilla Firefox
See More
Specs
Platforms:
Android, iOS(standard release), Windows, Mac OS, Linux(beta release)
License:
Open Source
Based On:
Mozilla Firefox, Netscape Navigator>Mozilla Suite
Default Search Engine:
Ghostery Private Search
See All Specs
Hide
See All
Experiences
Get it
here
33
7
Otter Browser
All
7
Experiences
Pros
3
Cons
3
Specs
Top
Con
External Rendering Engine
It uses the Qt Web Engine from your local Qt installation which is usually not often updated.
See More
Top
Pro
Under GNU GPL
A better license for a browser than a restrictive "all rights reserved".
See More
Top
Con
No support for addons
See More
Top
Pro
Open source
Anyone can contribute to the Otter Browser, solve common issues, bugs.
See More
Top
Con
Under GNU GPL
It is licensed under GPL which is less permissive than other opensource licenses like BSD or MIT.
See More
Top
Pro
Legacy Opera
Aims to recreate the best aspects of Opera 12.x.
See More
Specs
License:
OpenSource (GNU GPL-3.0)
Based On:
N/A
Browser Engine:
Qt WebEngine (Blink)
Default Search Engine:
DuckDuckGo
Hide
See All
Experiences
free
350
60
Min
All
8
Experiences
Pros
4
Cons
3
Specs
Top
Pro
Minimal design
See More
Top
Con
Lacks basic navigation buttons
No backward or forward buttons makes it a bit cumbersome to navigate.
See More
Top
Pro
Built-in tracker protection
Prevents automatic loading of cookies as well.
See More
Top
Con
No MIMEtypes defined or added
Won't open or even download Microsoft Office documents.
See More
Top
Pro
Built in AdBlock
See More
Top
Con
No startpage
It is not possible to add a startpage.
See More
Top
Pro
Open source
Built with Electron using JS & CSS.
See More
Specs
License:
OpenSource (Apache-2.0)
Based On:
Chromium core
Browser Engine:
Blink
Hide
See All
Experiences
Get it
here
145
36
AMP Browser
All
7
Experiences
Pros
5
Cons
1
Specs
Top
Pro
Useful
Highlights AMP results in Google Search on desktop.
See More
Top
Con
AMP pages are loaded through Google
All AMP pages are loaded though Google's servers, meaning Google can log your browsing history and theoretically manipulate website contents.
See More
Top
Pro
Ultra fast
Automatically loads AMP (Accelerated Mobile Pages) and MIP (Mobile Instant Pages) web pages whenever possible.
See More
Top
Pro
Open source
Based on vanilla Chromium.
See More
Top
Pro
Data saving
Saves data using Data Compression Proxy.
See More
Top
Pro
Ad blocking
Has a built-in ad blocker.
See More
Specs
Platforms:
Windows, Ubuntu
License:
OpenSource
Based On:
Chromium
Browser Engine:
Blink
Hide
See All
Experiences
Get it
here
10
4
CentBrowser
All
6
Experiences
Pros
2
Cons
3
Specs
Top
Pro
Interesting features
It has a lot of options and settings.
See More
Top
Con
Proprietary
It is unfree software.
See More
Top
Pro
One Distributor
There is exactly one build made by one distributor which lowers the risk of malware.
See More
Top
Con
slow
See More
Top
Con
windows only
See More
Specs
License:
proprietary
Based On:
Chromium
Browser Engine:
Blink
Hide
Get it
here
15
6
Falkon
All
9
Experiences
Pros
3
Cons
5
Specs
Top
Con
Weak multimedia support
It has some issues with multimedia content eg. Non-playing videos on webpages.
See More
Top
Pro
Developed by KDE
See More
Top
Con
Now under the KDE umbrella
Qupzilla is now discontinued and renamed to Falkon. It will also now be a part of KDE and will probably need more dependencies like kde-frameworks in the future.
See More
Top
Pro
Lightweight
See More
Top
Con
Linux-only
See More
Top
Pro
Free and Open Source
GPLv3 license.
See More
Top
Con
Bookmark management not the strongest part
It often requires quite a lot of clicks to add and remove bookmarks.
See More
Top
Con
Nobody uses it
See More
Specs
License:
OpenSource (GPLv3)
Based On:
QupZilla
Browser Engine:
Qt WebEngine (Blink)
Default Search Engine:
DuckDuckGo
Hide
See All
Experiences
free
301
84
Firefox Focus
All
5
Experiences
Pros
4
Cons
1
Top
Pro
Keeps your activities private
It automatically blocks any ad trackers and erases your browsing history which includes your passwords and cookies.
See More
Top
Con
Notification spam
Tells you to clean the browser every single time you open it.
See More
Top
Pro
Good loading speed
Since it blocks ads, trackers and other things that can slow down web pages, you'll be able to browse the web faster.
See More
Top
Pro
Simple to use
See More
Top
Pro
Suitable as a secondary browser for everyday use
As it is very fast and private it can be used for everyday use together with a browser with your passwords and login information.
See More
Hide
FREE
52
20
Qutebrowser
All
10
Experiences
Pros
5
Cons
4
Specs
Top
Pro
Vim-style keyboard shortcuts and commands for rapid navigation
With suggestions/auto-complete to reduce the learning curve.
See More
Top
Con
Software rendering only with Nouveau Drivers
See More
Top
Pro
Fast and light on resource usage
See More
Top
Con
Steep learning curve
If you're not a vim user, it will take some time to get used to the shortcuts.
See More
Top
Pro
Highly customizable
And quite easy to configure. You can even write your own config.
See More
Top
Con
Slow
As it is mainly written in Python, it's startup is slower than the competition.
See More
Top
Pro
Great for Privacy
Makes no unexpected network requests by default, unlike most other browsers (Chrome, Chromium, Brave, Firefox, etc).
See More
Top
Con
Requires additional support and plugins for video playback
See More
Top
Pro
Userscripts
Call custom scripts on web pages or links (hinting mode). You can use this for downloading of videos (youtube-dl, adfree), saving web pages as pdf or adding news sources to your RSS reader (newsboat).
See More
Specs
License:
OpenSource (GPL-3.0)
Based On:
N/A
Browser Engine:
Qt WebEngine (Blink)
Default Search Engine:
DuckDuckGo
Hide
See All
Experiences
free
530
160
Vivaldi
All
54
Experiences
Pros
35
Cons
18
Specs
Top
Pro
Compatible with all Chrome extensions
Since Vivaldi is built on Chromium, the same base as Chrome (among other browsers) is built on, it was possible for Vivaldi developers to allow Chrome extensions to run in their browser.
See More
Top
Con
Some non-optional telemetry
According to its privacy policy, Vivaldi sends an approximate location (country or major city), randomized ID, version, cpu architecture, screen resolution (to know what screen sizes to test on) and time since last message every 24 hours (to know amount of active users).
See More
Top
Pro
Tabs can be stacked
Tabs can be grouped under a single tab to easily keep track of all open webpages.
See More
Top
Con
Enabling "Hardware Accelerated Scrolling" can make scrolling jittery
See More
Top
Pro
Lots of features and customizability
Vivaldi has a lot of features and customizability. Far more then most (perhaps all) other browses, and many to list them all individuality as separate pros.
See More
Top
Con
No Fingerprint Protection
Vivaldi doesn't include fingerprint randomization like Brave does by default or configured Firefox/ Librewolf.
See More
Top
Pro
Ability to search through settings, history, open tabs, bookmarks in one place
A feature called Quick Commands (accessed via Ctrl + Q) allows quickly getting to settings, history, open tabs, bookmarks with incremental search.
See More
Top
Con
Sponsored bookmarks
Vivaldi has a number of preinstalled bookmarks, like Amazon. On some occasions, new bookmarks have been added when the browser updates. All of these bookmarks can be deleted, same as any other bookmark.
See More
Top
Pro
Full of customizable keyboard shortcuts (can be completely keyboard-driven)
It's possible to change and add keyboard shortcuts for basically all commands. It also has single key shortcuts to execute actions with one click.
See More
Top
Con
Can't protect pinned tabs from changing to another URL
Clicking on a page link, then another, easy to wind up far from the original pinned tab site. There is no chrome addon or native vivaldi function to stop this.
See More
Top
Pro
PC Cross-platform
Vivaldi is available on Windows, GNU/Linux and macOS, so it covers the most used PC operating systems.
See More
Top
Con
Can't disable all telemetry
Vivaldi needs some amount of knowledge about the amount of active users, for business deals.
See More
Top
Pro
Notes
A notes panel allows to save notes from webpages and can include screenshots for reference and have tags and organized in folders to help manage them. Thumbnails are too small and Notes do not have separate page in settings, but it should, there are a lot of things to improve.
See More
Top
Con
Same security vulnerabilities as Chrome
Vivaldi uses the same browser engine as Chrome, meaning it has the same security-vulnerabilities as Chrome. Chrome is a big target for hackers (being the most popular browser in the world), and a vulnerability for Chrome will likely also exist in Vivaldi.
See More
Top
Pro
Web Panels
Web Panels allow for easy access to any site from the side panel. They are useful for reading two websites side by side or for chatting (i.e. Facebook) and surfing at the same time. Panels can be hidden when not in use.
See More
Top
Con
No automatic silent background updates, except on macOS
Unlike most modern browsers, Vivaldi doesn't have the option to update silently in the background. It gives you a dialog box when an update comes out. The box doesn't warn you that not updating the browser could expose you to security risks, which could be pretty bad for your average joe, who doesn't know computers that well.
See More
Top
Pro
Custom search engines
You can add as many search engines as you like. For example you can set up one for YouTube, one for Wikipedia, or whatever you want: you need only the URL of the search and it can be used from the URL bar (by prefixing it's nickname, yt for YouTube for example).
See More
Top
Con
Slower than Chrome
See More
Top
Pro
Synchronisation
Everything can be synced with a Vivaldi account. Though there's still no mobile version, you can sync between computers and OSes.
See More
Top
Con
Still uses some Google services (can be disabled)
See More
Top
Pro
Tab behaviour can be customised
The order you toggle, open, close or clone tabs can be modified to match a workflow that best works for you. For example you can choose tabs to toggle in recent order so you can go back and forth between the last most useful tabs without needing to change their position on the tab bar.
See More
Top
Con
Window size and resizing on Mac is broken
See More
Top
Pro
Tab bar position can be changed
You can change tab bar position to top, bottom left or right.
See More
Top
Con
No touch bar support
See More
Top
Pro
Mouse gestures
Integrated mouse gestures. Fully configurable as of Vivaldi 1.2 (snapshot available now). Allows for navigating the web, switching tabs, closing windows, opening settings etc. with a flick of the mouse.
See More
Top
Con
No option to open saved tab stack as a tab stack
You may save stack, but you can open it as separate tabs. Interesting that when you save session with stacks, you'll be able to open the stacks with inner settings of page tiling (size and zoom) as well. Contradiction worth of shame.
See More
Top
Pro
Dark theme out of the box
There's even an option to automatically transition from light to dark based on the time of day.
See More
Top
Con
Partially proprietary
While Vivaldi is currently available gratis (without monetary charge), it is currently not fully libre (meaning that it does not allow users to view the source code used to create, to modify that code, or to redistribute modifications). It is therefore not considered free or open-source software. The C++ source code, for the Chromium backedn, however is open-source under a BSD license and can be downloaded and browsed from here. The UI code is not open-source, but consists of easily readable HTML, CSS & JS. Modifications can be shared on their forum's dedicated section.
See More
Top
Pro
Manages bookmarks well
Vivaldi has an excellent bookmarks system. Bookmarks can be easily accessible via Speed Dial, side-bar, bookmarks bar, quick commands. No more messy bookmarks bar is needed and location bar suggestion is improved thus!
See More
Top
Con
Freezes often
See More
Top
Pro
Built-in page capture
Vivaldi can grab a picture of the whole webpage or part of it and saves it automatically inside a note or as a file in your disk, or in your elected directory. But I have problems with images of full windows shown on monitor (using X Window System in GNU/Linux). Here I use system XWindow screenshots.
See More
Top
Con
Feature creep
See More
Top
Pro
Analytical history
View graphically your most visited pages on a monthly, weekly, or daily basis.
See More
Top
Con
Some users seem to believe the developers do not care for your privacy
See More
Top
Pro
Non-closable fixed tabs
A setting lets you prevent closing fixed tabs so you don't close anything important by accident.
See More
Top
Con
No built-in proxy
Unlike Opera Proxy (which leaks your IP address), Vivaldi doesn't have a proxy service out of the box. You'll need an extension or an external program, to use Vivaldi with a proxy server.
See More
Top
Pro
Fast and safe
It is so faster and safer.
See More
Top
Pro
Programmable user interface
For you programmers out there: Since Vivaldi uses JavaScript, React, Node.js, Browserify and multiple npm packages to build the browser, it can be customized with ease by anyone who knows HTML, CSS, and JavaScript.
See More
Top
Pro
Saving sessions
It saves oversights many options and functions implemented in Vivaldi. E.g. see CON "No option to open saved tab stack as... tab stack!"
See More
Top
Pro
Reader mode
Vivaldi has a built-in reader mode so you can remove all the clutter in news pages and read only the content, you can also customise the reader mode, like font size, style and colours.
See More
Top
Pro
Usable fullscreen mode with address bar when needed
In comparison, on Chrome you will not see the address bar, only on ChromeOS when your mouse is on the top of the screen.
See More
Top
Pro
Built-in ad and tracker blocker
Vivaldi has a built-in blocker that allows you to select between blocking just trackers or both trackers and ads. With customizable blocking list sources, good performance, and support for all the standard blocker list features you find in ad blocker extensions (with more to come), you might not need an ad blocker extension at all. This also comes in handy on Android, where Chromium/Vivaldi doesn't support extensions.
See More
Top
Pro
Allows navigating to the next page without searching for the link
A feature called "fast forward" puts a dedicated button before the address bar. It takes you to the next page of a multi-page article, forum thread, or search results, without having to hunt for the link.
See More
Top
Pro
WebRTC IP leaking can be disabled
A built-in setting called "Broadcast IP" will stop the IP leaking with WebRTC when disabled.
See More
Top
Pro
GDPR compliant
Respects Privacy.
See More
Top
Pro
Updates via dialog box
Unlike most modern browsers (but like most browsers of yesteryear), Vivaldi gives you a dialog box when an new version comes out; it doesn't just update silently in the background. The dialog box tells you about the changes that have been made, and lets you chose when you want to update.
See More
Top
Pro
Portable version can be added on default apps
Most portable version cannot be added as default apps but Vivaldi offers that option and it comes with updater too.
See More
Top
Pro
Single-key keyboard shortcuts (if you wish)
The optional feature for controling various functions (e.g. opening, closing and switching of tabs) by pressing just a single key rather than two turns out to be an extremely convenient extra.
See More
Top
Pro
Easy UI zoom, i.e. adjusting the size of all user interface text
Relieve your eyes or save space on the screen – your choice!
See More
Top
Pro
Shortcuts/nicknames for URLs
Just bookmark a page and you can henceforth open it by a shortname of your choosing.
See More
Top
Pro
Allows for TOR hidden services (.Onion)
Only with a VPN that offers TOR connectivity.
See More
Top
Pro
Customizable UI Theme and colors
Vivaldi can change the colors across the browser and has the option to change the color automatically depending on the page. Also, page loading animations are available in the address bar.
See More
Top
Pro
Side panel and status bar
Unlike most modern browsers (but like most browsers of yesteryear), Vivaldi has a status bar. But the status bar is optional, you can turn it off (in the settings) if you don't want it. Vivaldi also has a side-panel, which again, can be turned off.
See More
Specs
Platforms:
Windows; macOS; Linux; Android
License:
BSD+Proprietary
Based On:
Chromium
Browser Engine:
Blink
Hide
See All
Experiences
free
1707
452
GNU IceCat
All
19
Experiences
Pros
8
Cons
10
Specs
Top
Con
Too much bloat
The browser comes with 15 addons installed by default, most of which are useless or ruin one's browsing experience.
See More
Top
Pro
All the benefits of Firefox, but with 100% free software
See More
Top
Con
Mainly just an old Firefox
It is mainly a renamend older version of Firefox that comes preinstalled with some extensions.
See More
Top
Pro
LibreJS
LibreJS blocks proprietary JavaScript code, ensuring your user freedom.
See More
Top
Con
Not up to date
Latest binary is still version 60.7 ESR and was last updated over a year ago
See More
Top
Pro
Protects your freedom, certified free by the FSF
See More
Top
Con
Requires too much unnecessary configuration to use
You have to manually delete all the bloated addons from your files (only for them to show up again when the browser is updated) and manually install some addons and themes that the browser labels as "corrupt".
See More
Top
Pro
Extra security and privacy features
See More
Top
Con
Very slow boot time
It takes 10+ seconds for the browser to load up
See More
Top
Pro
Made by idealists
It is part of the GNU Project.
See More
Top
Con
Can't install some Firefox themes/addons
"Installation aborted because the addon appears to be corrupt".
See More
Top
Pro
No spyware
See More
Top
Con
Includes LibreJS by default with no way to remove it
See More
Top
Pro
Https-Everywhere by default
See More
Top
Con
Very slow boot time
It takes 10+ seconds for the browser to load up
See More
Top
Pro
SpyBlock
Blocks privacy trackers.
See More
Top
Con
Dependent on Mozilla
Since IceCat is based off Firefox, it's dependent on all of Mozilla's decisions.
See More
Top
Con
Made by idealists
It is part of the GNU Project.
See More
Specs
License:
OpenSource
Browser Engine:
Gecko
Hide
See All
Experiences
Free
586
185
SeaMonkey
All
7
Experiences
Pros
3
Cons
3
Specs
Top
Con
Bloated with unnecessary features
Seamonkey has a browser, email client, and even an IRC chat. Too much bloat! It doesn't do one thing, let alone do anything well. It should be avoided.
See More
Top
Pro
Full internet suite
Wraps all your internet stuff together. It's like it's Firefox and Thunderbird all wrapped into one, and it kinda is. It's the continuation of the project both of those were extracted from.
See More
Top
Con
Looks very old and outdated
See More
Top
Pro
Not bloatware
See More
Top
Con
No Addons
not a single adblocker or privacy addon that was useful
See More
Top
Pro
Designed for usability, not looks
See More
Specs
License:
OpenSource
Based On:
Netscape Navigator>Mozilla Suite
Browser Engine:
Gecko
Default Search Engine:
DuckDuckGo
Hide
See All
Experiences
free
65
27
Brave
All
38
Experiences
Pros
14
Cons
23
Specs
Top
Pro
Free/libre software
Released to the community under the Mozilla Public License (MPL), this software respect the FSF's four freedoms, including the freedom to use, modify, and redistribute with or without modification freely.
See More
Top
Con
Brave is an Ad company
Brave Software is a for-profit company (though users must opt into Brave ads and Brave doesn't track users.)
See More
Top
Pro
Option to disable additional privacy concerns
Like fingerprint tracking.
See More
Top
Con
Download package is very large considering it as a browser
Brave takes on a lot of roles besides just browsing so it is understandably a larger file.
See More
Top
Pro
Takes care of privacy and security
Takes privacy seriously by blocking ads and trackers and not tracking people's searches. Things like HTTPS everywhere and no tracking are standard with Brave. In most other browsers, things like these are optional at best.
See More
Top
Con
Useless built-in 'ad blocker'
Its adblocker is useless to be honest. Since the extension uBlock Origin is a great blocker by itself, the Brave ad blocker does not block every ad!
See More
Top
Pro
Built-in adblocking
Other apps make it difficult to block ads without rooting your phone or going through unoptimized add-on stores, but Link Bubble blocks them out of the box, making browsing much less crowded. Contains an optional "Allow Brave Acceptable Ads" So you can support the site you truly enjoy.
See More
Top
Con
Quite intrusive advertisements, especially on Windows
Advertisements keep popping up in the Windows notification center. Must opt in to ad system, but no option to disable sound for ad notifications only.
See More
Top
Pro
Optional feature for you to get reimbursed for viewing ads
Basic Attention Token; you can decide to opt into a new blockchain-based digital advertising system, giving publishers a better deal and users a share of the ad revenue for their attention.
See More
Top
Con
Still dependent on Google
Since it's based on Chrome.
See More
Top
Pro
Now supports Chrome Webstore
It's now a faster, less intrusive Chrome.
See More
Top
Con
Uses much RAM
1 tab, 400+ RAM, also it depends on what website you're on.
See More
Top
Pro
Tor is available right in the browser
Private Window with Tor hides your IP address from the sites you visit.
See More
Top
Con
Same security-holes as Chrome
On the desktop: Brave uses the same browser engine as Chrome, meaning it has the same security-holes as Chrome. Chrome is a big target for hackers (being the most popular browser in the world), and a webpage that will hack Chrome may also hack Brave. However, Brave has security features that Chrome doesn't (such as a built-in adblocker). Those features will stop many hacking attempts.
See More
Top
Pro
Faster than Google Chrome
Brave consistently beats Chrome in speed, might have to do with less tracking being run in the background.
See More
Top
Con
Doesn't remove search engine ads
See More
Top
Pro
Very fast
The fastest browser out there.
See More
Top
Con
No reader view
Can be accessed with an extension though.
See More
Top
Pro
Sync is now available
Option to synchronize data between devices using peer-to-peer connections. No sign-in required, only a sync code.
See More
Top
Con
Dumbed down in the latest versions
In previous versions, Brave felt more like Firefox. Now it's been dumbed down, it feels more like Chrome/Chromium. For example: There's no menu-bar.
See More
Top
Pro
Option to pay supported sites based on view time percentage
Set up automatic micro-donations. Brave will automatically divide a monthly donation among the top sites you visit. And/or, you can decide which sites get what percentage of your donation. It’s called pinning.
See More
Top
Con
The iPhone version has some odd behavior
On reopening Brave, it often returns you to the "search results" page, rather than the webpage you had previously browsed to from the search results page. Might just be a specific configuration.
See More
Top
Pro
Supports the latest technologies
Brave regularly adds new functionalities like decentralized domain support and a native crypto wallet long before Chrome considers them. These features to be disabled in settings.
See More
Top
Con
Cache dump
Doesn't clear cache well, shows same page even after emptying it until you ctrl+F5 to get fresh page every time you visit the page(s).
See More
Top
Pro
Developed by creator of Mozilla and Javascript
See More
Top
Con
A browser for NFT-ers(?)
There would be less of a problem with using Web3 solutions if they weren't sometimes looking like an art for art's sake, a jerkcircle shoving down it's own topic down the users' throat. Replacing the Web 2.0 with another commercial solution is bound to end up as a reinvention of the wheel, where even more commercialization and direct monetization will push digital exclusion. Non-profit open source community has achieved great things while so far NFTs and cryptos are, not without a reason, ridiculed.
See More
Top
Pro
Cross-platform Web Browser
Brave is available on Windows, Linux, macOS, Android, iOS
See More
Top
Con
Sync issues
Unable to sync extensions, no cloud sync (only device sync).
See More
Top
Con
Appearance
No options to customize apperance, and make the bookmarks appear on the home page, for instance.
See More
Top
Con
Creator support limited
Most creators don't use it and so will not profit from the crypto system.
See More
Top
Con
Poor Customer Support
Only customer support available in Brave community. Mods usually does not help.
See More
Top
Con
Promotes search engines that track users such as Bing and Google
Google Search is the first search engine on the list.
See More
Top
Con
Bookmark management
Bookmark management is not as seamless as other browsers.
See More
Top
Con
No cloud sync like Firefox
See More
Top
Con
Power hungry, uses much more battery power than other browsers
Per default Brave enables hardware acceleration which results in a much higher energy (battery) consumption than the most other web browsers.
See More
Top
Con
Hypocritical/deceptive stance on privacy and advertisement
Brave is advertised as a browser that respects your privacy and blocks ads while still supporting content creators. However, at the same time the company is making deals with Facebook, Twitter and others to whitelist their trackers and ads
See More
Top
Con
Bookmark button located on the left side of the URL bar and can't be moved
See More
Specs
License:
MPL-2.0
Based On:
Chromium core
Browser Engine:
Blink
Hide
See All
Experiences
free
2225
605
Naver Whale
All
9
Experiences
Pros
5
Cons
3
Specs
Top
Pro
It's a Suite
It includes a calculator, timer, calendar and unit converter and a built-in music player.
See More
Top
Con
Misses translations
Since Naver is the South Korean Google it focuses mostly on Korea and some parts of the browser might miss translations.
See More
Top
Pro
Convenient sidebar
You can have a bunch of apps on the sidebar which makes accessing them more convenient.
See More
Top
Con
Looks like an alien
It does not follow your desktop overall design.
See More
Top
Pro
Looks cute
Has a cute aesthetic with many options for wallpapers and changing the browser design.
See More
Top
Con
Feature creep
Too much stuff.
See More
Top
Pro
Compatible with Chromium extensions
You can use Chromium extensions.
See More
Top
Pro
Uses Blink
It uses Blink which is the most used rendering engine.
See More
Specs
License:
proprietary
Based On:
Chromium core with proprietary UI
Default Search Engine:
Naver
Hide
See All
Experiences
Get it
here
28
13
Tor Browser
All
24
Experiences
Pros
11
Cons
12
Specs
Top
Pro
Tor sets the standard for safe and private browsing
If you follow their instructions religiously, Tor is the nec plus ultra in terms of safety and privacy. For the time being at least.
See More
Top
Con
Must adapt new browsing habits
It is not recommended to do several things TOR browser that users would want to do in a normal browser, such as visiting social networks and banking.
See More
Top
Pro
Access hidden .onion sites
See More
Top
Con
Not made as your daily browser
It does not support many modern features due security and is pretty slow.
See More
Top
Pro
Portable
Can be installed and run on a portable device such as a USB stick.
See More
Top
Con
Extremely slow
Caused by the tor network the browser depends on.
See More
Top
Pro
Free and open source
See More
Top
Con
You will hang on every recaptcha
See More
Top
Pro
Uses the Tor network
See More
Top
Con
Not secure
Firefox isn't as secure as Chrome.
See More
Top
Pro
NoScript and HTTPS Everywhere installed by default
See More
Top
Con
Tor is very outdated on Firefox code
It's not that it uses the same browser engine, just look at the logos.
See More
Top
Pro
Relatively fast
See More
Top
Con
Dependant on Mozilla
Since it uses gecko.
See More
Top
Pro
The only browser package which includes a gateway built-in into TOR, a network where you can actually browse the web completely anonymously
Privacy. It's fundamental. And this browser has enabled and keeps enabling people to lookup things they don't want their ISP/ government or surveillance marketers to see. And what's better they won't know a thing about what you searched. What is visible to the outside world however is the fact: you make use of TOR and probably the TORBrowser this client / citizen of ours is using TOR to obfuscate his /her traffic (=~anonymize ).
See More
Top
Con
Did not install
Will also not delete either.
See More
Top
Pro
Safe
Tor is just as safe as Chrome or firefox, as long as you don't visit malicious websites.
See More
Top
Con
Does not guarantee perfect anonymity
Unlike what most users would suspect.
See More
Top
Pro
Based on Firefox
Firefox is a great browser, and tor is built on it
See More
Top
Con
Using Tor on Android is still not great
Samsumg users will never use it.
See More
Top
Pro
Open source
Open source builds trust on using the program
See More
Top
Con
Open Source
Anyone can hack the source code and insert malware.
See More
Top
Con
Too many supporters
Tor has so many supporters such as brave, which makes it more popular. This is another thing how tor will be unsecure.
See More
Specs
Platforms:
Windows, MacOS, Linux, Android
License:
Open Source (MPL-2.0)
Based On:
Mozilla Firefox ESR
Browser Engine:
Gecko
See All Specs
Hide
See All
Experiences
FREE
854
268
Mozilla Firefox
All
54
Experiences
Pros
34
Cons
19
Specs
Top
Pro
Strong HTML5 feature support
Firefox scores strongly on HTML5 feature support. Though not as strongly as Chromium/Chrome browsers do.
See More
Top
Con
Some built-in advertising
With their new "pocket" feature, they offer advertisements built-in.
See More
Top
Pro
Syncs between devices
Firefox Sync is an optional feature in Firefox that allows syncing bookmarks, passwords, and add-ons between devices.
See More
Top
Con
Cannot directly translate page
Unlike Google Chrome, if you visit a website with a different language, you cannot translate it, which is a bad user experience for some.
See More
Top
Pro
Free, open source and community driven
Firefox is available as a free download. All Mozilla software is licensed under the Mozilla Public License. Instructions on how to obtain the source code can be found here.
See More
Top
Con
Lack of keyboard shortcuts customization
Keyboard shortcuts can not be changed in a user-friendly way. It is also difficult to manipulate addons with hotkeys.
See More
Top
Pro
Respects your privacy
Mozilla is one of the first browsers that advocates privacy. They believe that internet should be in the user's control and not those who run the websites, and so they give tools inside the browser to make the user be more in control.
See More
Top
Con
When you search in a website (Ctrl + F) there are no marks appearing in the right scrollbar
All Chromium based browsers have this feature.
See More
Top
Pro
Strong developer tool
The built-in developer tools have been merged with the popular FireBug extension since FF57.
See More
Top
Con
Installs Addons with updates
Mozilla is installing/integrating addons with every update like the Mr. Robot promotion - it also has integrated Pocket that spams you every time you open the browser or a new tab with partners of Pocket.
See More
Top
Pro
High performance
The Firefox Quantum update (FF57) greatly increases the render speed and general performance of the browser, by taking better advantage of the user's hardware.
See More
Top
Con
Uses Google as its default search engine
Which is pretty ironic for a browser that's focused on "privacy".
See More
Top
Pro
Reader View
Reader View in Firefox allows users to read an article without any distractions by removing ads, unrelated elements and other distractive objects (similar to Microsoft Edge's Reading Mode and Safari's reader mode).
See More
Top
Con
Sometimes very buggy and slow
On sites like twitch.tv chat scrolling is still not fixed. Compared to other browsers Firefox is still very slow and feels sluggish.
See More
Top
Pro
One of the few browsers not using Chrome's Blink engine
Firefox uses its own rendering engine (called Gecko), instead of Google-controlled Blink like the vast majority of other browsers.
See More
Top
Con
Uses GTK on Linux/BSD
This makes the integration on non-GTK Desktop Environments very hard.
See More
Top
Pro
Fast
With new integrations focused on security and performance, Firefox is faster and less likely to have problems during use than ever before.
See More
Top
Con
Multi Profile is not user friendly
Multi profile requires commandline -no remote to use and open about:profiles to create manually (on Chrome, you can instantly create them on right top user button).
See More
Top
Pro
Open Source
Open Source means that you can see the source code. So everybody even if they don't work for Mozilla is able to look what the browser does in the background. So you can be 100% sure that Firefox doesn't have hidden "spy features" unlike Google Chrome.
See More
Top
Con
Antivirus has False positives
All Downloads in Firefox are scanned for viruses, but there are a lot of false positives.
See More
Top
Pro
Good font rasterizing
Font rasterizing on Windows is much better than in competitors. Even smaller text is clear and contrast.
See More
Top
Con
Doesn’t support multiple languages for spell check
If you write in multiple languages, you need to manually switch the spell check language.
See More
Top
Pro
Automatically updated
Firefox is automatically updated on the platforms where it makes sense.
See More
Top
Con
Terrible user interface
See More
Top
Pro
Uses less resources
Firefox 57 (Quantum) and newer uses less resources than ever. It is proven with benchmark done by AppleInsider.
See More
Top
Con
Crappy license
Cannot redistribute binary after source code modification.
See More
Top
Pro
Dark theme
Beyond the toolbar and tabs, it darkens UI elements such as the URL-bar, pop-downs, new-tab page and more.
See More
Top
Con
Major updates may break any installed add-ons
See More
Top
Pro
Awesome customizability
Great library of add-ons.
See More
Top
Con
Now forces install and use of snap
Only on Ubuntu
See More
Top
Pro
Tagging bookmarks
Firefox is one of the few browsers that you can tag your bookmarks. You can view a list of tags and can search your bookmarks in the address bar with tags.
See More
Top
Con
New icon looks ugly
See More
Top
Pro
Really independent browser
It's not dependent on Google.
See More
Top
Con
GTK Themes styles the HTML forms
If you're in Linux and you use a dark GTK theme that uses white text and come to a webpage that forces black text on html-forms buttons you will get black buttons with unreadable black text.
See More
Top
Pro
Screenshot tool
Powerful screenshot tool built right into the browser.
See More
Top
Con
Doesn't care for its original guidelines/goals
Mozilla originally aimed to be the "good guys" with user choice and privacy in mind. Their current leadership cannot be trusted to hold those goals in high regard: 1) Added Pocket - a privacy data sensitive plugin, made it mandatory 2) Tried to sneak in advertisement as "drive-by hack", backpedaled unconvincingly once users complained 3) Tried to randomly inject a small percentage of Firefox downloads in Germany with a data collecting plugin (Cliqz) that tech-savy Germans consider adware (no opt-out question asked).
See More
Top
Pro
Ethical and pragmatic company mission
The Mozilla Manifesto outlines the company's mission and principles. Paraphrasing, they want the Internet to be a free and open resource, and to enable individuals to get the best use of that resource. They do this by creating open source software to which anyone may contribute, so long as such contributions fit with their principles (both ethical and technical).
See More
Top
Con
It's a memory hog even though Mozilla claims it is not
Mozilla claims it's using 30% less RAM than Chrome but in real life tests it uses much more.
See More
Top
Pro
A lot of add-ons
An enormous number of add-ons.
See More
Top
Pro
Fast bookmark management
In order to add an open page to the bookmark bar, the tab can be dragged down and is added immediately.
See More
Top
Pro
Built-in privacy protection
Blocks tracking cookies, finger print scanners and Cryptominers by default. Can be changed to the user's individual needs.
See More
Top
Pro
Lower memory fingerprint than competitors
Firefox used to be a trailer in memory usage, but as of 2017 it's less hungry for memory than competitors like Edge, Chrome, Safari and Opera.
See More
Top
Pro
Text-to-speech (with adjustable speed) without add-ons
Firefox Reader Mode includes Narrate, a feature that adds text-to-speech functionality to the browser.
See More
Top
Pro
Very secure
See More
Top
Pro
Firefox experiments
FF experiments are Mozilla projects available from FF Test Pilot, such as Firefox Colour, witch lets you customise your browser theme to your liking!
See More
Top
Pro
Firefox Lockwise password management
Helps store your usernames and passwords. Lockwise also lets you know if any of the sites you have login details for have had their (and potentially your) data leaked!
See More
Top
Pro
HTML5 video preload
The only web browser that only preloads entire HTML5 video which is useful for slow internet.
See More
Top
Pro
Mobile
Firefox has a solid mobile app.
See More
Top
Pro
Integration with Pocket
Firefox comes with built-in Pocket integration that can allow users to quickly save the article for a read it later function to easily find any articles saved in Pocket from various sources and devices.
See More
Top
Pro
Installed by default on many Linux distributions
Many Linux distributions come preinstalled with Mozilla Firefox
See More
Top
Pro
About:config
Master about:config and uBlock Origin, and all Firefox-based browsers will be yours.
See More
Top
Pro
WebRender
The newer versions of it will soon use WebRender to render webpages, which'll make it much more efficient by utilizing GPU to paint webpages.
See More
Top
Pro
UI
UI is better than any other chromium-based browser.
See More
Specs
Platforms:
Windows, macOS, Linux, iOS, Android,iPadOS
License:
MPL-2.0
Based On:
Netscape>Mozilla Suite
Browser Engine:
Gecko, Webkit on iOS(since Apple does not allow third party web engines)
See All Specs
Hide
See All
Experiences
FREE
2423
711
Pale Moon
All
30
Experiences
Pros
17
Cons
12
Specs
Top
Con
Unsecure
Pale Moon lacks the sandboxing and other privacy protecting features included in latest Firefox releases.
See More
Top
Pro
Has its own add-on ecosystem, built on time-tested technologies such as XUL (plus JS and CSS) and XPCOM
"Classic" Firefox add-ons can work, but they are not supported and should be updated or forked to become a Pale Moon add-on.
See More
Top
Con
Still contains some spyware
Default homepage is spyware and search suggestions and automatic updates are enabled by default.
See More
Top
Pro
Designed for usability, not the shiny new things
See More
Top
Con
Outdated rendering engine
It is an really old fork of Gecko that misses many of the newer web features.
See More
Top
Pro
Light on resources, although it's not its main focus
See More
Top
Con
Pale Moon is based on very outdated Firefox code
See More
Top
Pro
Independent from Google and Mozilla
Pale Moon is an independent fork of an older version of Firefox. Therefore, it is independent from Mozilla and are not affected by their terrible decisions such as removing XUL, adding telemetry, pocket, etc.
See More
Top
Con
Uses Goanna
It an old Gecko-fork that is developed mainly by one man.
See More
Top
Pro
Customizable
See More
Top
Con
Lacks popular extensions and adblockers
It doesn't have ublock origin and umatrix.
See More
Top
Pro
Stable
See More
Top
Con
Does not contain multi-process sandboxing
See More
Top
Pro
Support for existing web standards
See More
Top
Con
Android version has odd behavior
Clicking does not work.
See More
Top
Pro
Respects your privacy
Contains much less spyware than Chrome and Firefox and all of it can easily be disabled.
See More
Top
Con
Pale Moon's website is cloudflared
See More
Top
Pro
Open source
So we can verify that the browser is not spyware.
See More
Top
Con
WebAssembly enabled by default
See More
Top
Pro
Supports complete themes
Pale Moon supports complete themes, something which Firefox used to have before version 57.
See More
Top
Con
Lead developer loves Cloudflare and hates Tor
Website is cloudflared and he thinks most sites should be hostile towards tor.
See More
Top
Pro
Support for GTK themes
Pale Moon supports your GTK theme while Firefox does not.
See More
Top
Con
Incompetent developers
See More
Top
Pro
Uses Goanna layout engine
Unlike most other browsers, Pale Moon uses its custom engine.
See More
Top
Pro
Has its own library of legacy extensions
See More
Top
Pro
Very Independent
It isn't controlled by Google nor Mozilla, has its own engine.
See More
Top
Pro
Good community support
See More
Top
Pro
Optimized for modern processors
See More
Top
Pro
Legacy Firefox
See More
Specs
Platforms:
x86-32, x86-64
License:
Open Source (MPL-2.0)
Based On:
Mozilla Firefox ESR
Browser Engine:
Goanna (Gecko-fork), SpiderMonkeys
See All Specs
Hide
See All
Experiences
free
1074
356
Chromium
All
21
Experiences
Pros
12
Cons
8
Specs
Top
Pro
Cross-platform
Chrome and Chromium are available on almost every device nowadays
See More
Top
Con
Lacks privacy options
See More
Top
Pro
Sandboxing
Every tab and plugin runs in its own subprocess so they will never affect the whole browser ,however that consumes more memory than other browsers
See More
Top
Con
High RAM usage
Due the sandboxing, Chromium also eats a lot of RAM , which can be a problem for machines with smaller RAM.
See More
Top
Pro
Latest Blink
This is the browser Blink is made for and developed alongside.
See More
Top
Con
No official builds
There are no official builds available so you have to rely on a third party distributor
See More
Top
Pro
Completely Open Source
Both Chromium and and its rendering engine Blink are licensed under the BSD-license which includes no copyleft unlike the GNU or Mozilla Licenses.
See More
Top
Con
Not possible to disable WebRTC
See More
Top
Pro
Access to Chrome's extensions
Chromium can access the Chrome Web Store and all the extensions hosted there can be installed and used on Chromium.
See More
Top
Con
Fat, slow, and another piece of google spyware
See More
Top
Pro
Supports all of Google Chrome features
As Chrome is based on Chromium they overlap in supported features. Chromium syncs between devices, automatically updates, has great built-in developer tools, installs extensions without a restart, includes a combined text bar for entering URLs and searching and has excellent HTML5 compatibility just like Chrome.
See More
Top
Con
Lacks support for certain common media formats
As Chromium avoids bundling any proprietary software, media that requires proprietary codecs or formats such as AAC, H.264, MP3 and Flash will not play by default on Chromium.
See More
Top
Pro
Bare
It does not have any extensions preinstalled and focuses to be a web browser.
See More
Top
Con
Can be dangerous / only available as Source
There are plenty of unofficial Chromium distributors and every one of them can disable specific features (like sandboxing) for their build, so you will never know what you get.
See More
Top
Pro
BSD license
You can do almost anything with the code.
See More
Top
Con
Under BSD License
See More
Top
Pro
Gets constant updates
While the Chromium-based browser haev to adapt their code to the update before release, original Chromuim doesn't need it so it gets updated more constantly and frequently.
See More
Top
Pro
Chromium sets the standard for Web Browsing
Since Google Chrome is the most used web browser, and that browser along with many others is based on Chromium, Chromium sets the standards for the internet and for security, and Firefox will always be years behind.
See More
Top
Pro
Backed by Google
Chromium was first released as a large portion of Chrome's source code as an open source project by Google in september 2008. The idea was to encourage developers to review the underlying code and to contribute in making Chrome cross platform and port it to Mac and Linux as well. Nowadays Chromium is a large project with a huge community that's standing behind it but still Google continues to take an extremely active role in Chromium development. This ensures the longevity and constant development and improvement of the browser.
See More
Top
Pro
Does not come with Google
Unlike Chrome it does come wihout any Google account requirement.
See More
Specs
License:
Opensource (BSD)
Based On:
N/A
Browser Engine:
Blink
Hide
See All
Experiences
free
545
197
Cake web browser
All
14
Experiences
Pros
4
Cons
9
Specs
Top
Pro
Less bloated than Google
Ad settings are removed.
See More
Top
Con
Unable to block Verizon media trackers
See More
Top
Pro
Adblock
Blocks ads.
See More
Top
Con
Lags and freezes
Something needs to be done about it.
See More
Top
Pro
Fast
Even faster than Google Chrome.
See More
Top
Con
Has Yahoo as its default search engine
Which is quite ironic for this "privacy" browser with Verizon Media.
See More
Top
Pro
Always secure 24/7
See More
Top
Con
Lacks tracker blocking features on websites you visit
See More
Top
Con
Same security holes as Yahoo
Cake uses the same browser as Yahoo, meaning that it has the same security holes as Yahoo. Yahoo is also a big target for hackers, and a web page that will hack Yahoo also will hack cake.
See More
Top
Con
Dumbed down its latest versions
Before, Cake almost felt like DuckDuckGo. Now it's dumbed down, it almost feels like Chrome/Chromium. For example, it's still not secure on websites you visit.
See More
Top
Con
Has odd behavior
When you leave the app and go back in, it lets you go back to the top of the page, rather than where you are.
See More
Top
Con
Mobile-only
Cake is currently available on mobile only. Due to the screen size, cake is not available on windows, linux, etc.
See More
Top
Con
Depends on Yahoo
Since it's based on Yahoo.
See More
Specs
Platforms:
Android, iOS, Chromebook
Based On:
Chromium, Firefox ESR, Yahoo Search
Price:
Free
Browser Engine:
Blink?, Webkit on iOS
See All Specs
Hide
See All
Experiences
Free+
13
7
Built By the Slant team
Find the best product instantly.
4.7 star rating
Add to Chrome
Add to Edge
Add to Firefox
Add to Opera
Add to Brave
Add to Safari
Try it now - it's free
{}
undefined
url next
price drop