AnokLola,

Thorium, because its fast, lightweight and open-source.

Asudox,
@Asudox@lemmy.world avatar

Fast? I wonder which security features they cut out of it.

lntl,
@lntl@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

chromium

Presi300,
@Presi300@lemmy.world avatar

For chromium, brave, though I’d just stick to Firefox it I were you

Teknikal,

I don’t use one but I did watch a YouTube video yesterday praising one called thorium. I might give it a try myself out of curiosity.

Octopus1348,

Just native Chromium, or if you don’t want any Google stuff, Ungoogled Chromium. They both use the same UI as Google Chrome. I recommend these because they have no such bloat, and if you want a chromium-based browser for rare usage, it does it’s thing.

On an unrelated note, I use GNOME Web on Linux and Safari on macOS (they are both based on WebKit). GNOME Web has some problems, but I can’t give up the animation of two finger scrolling between pages and smooth scrolling on touchpad. I use Firefox as a fallback browser on Linux, because I have never really needed something that is specifically Chromium.

YungOnions,

I switched to Thorium browser, seems pretty good. There’s also Tempest Browser which is still in Beta, but is a bit like Brave but without the Crypto and some other features. I recommend Thorium, tbh. Seems to work well and has a lot of performance patches added, as well as security. More here: youtu.be/naDYUVFs1-8?si=eC1CtA4q-oF1L8ix

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