7

Do not tell me chrome, or I will hunt you down and beat you.

Do not tell me chrome, or I will hunt you down and beat you.

8 comments

[–] Greenseats 2 points (+2|-0)

Been very happy with the Brave Browser (brave.com). All the ad-blocking and privacy features are built-in. Super fast on mobile

[–] jidlaph 0 points (+0|-0) Edited

I couldn't judge how well Brave's privacy features stack up against extensions like uBlock, and the lack of other extensions is a deal-breaker for me.

And the way it spread felt a bit shill-y.

[–] jobes 0 points (+0|-0)

+1 for Brave. Switched to it both on desktop and mobile around 6 months ago and have never looked back.

[–] TheRedArmy 2 points (+2|-0)

Opera.

Very lightweight, built-in VPN and ad-blocker (although the ad-blocker doesn't catch everything, it catches most of it).

Neat name and logo.

[–] InnocentBystander 0 points (+0|-0) Edited

I would also recommend Opera.
Palemoon might also be worth looking at.
I've had a good experience with both.

[–] PMYA 0 points (+0|-0)

There aren't any, really. All of them have some kind of issue. I use Chrome for general browsing, Firefox for more technical stuff and occasionally Midori, because its so lightweight. I've used Pale Moon before and it is just a shit version of Firefox. Browsers based around privacy or lightweight browsers just don't have basic support for necessary things, it is easier to just customise the shit out of Chrome or Firefox.

[–] KFCNyanCat 0 points (+0|-0)

Waterfox is a fork of Firefox that aims to remove things like telemetry and keep add-on support