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submitted 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

I'm what's known as a chronic hopper. I'm always on the lookout for new software, especially when it comes to browsers and Linux distros, but I'm here to ask you about browsers specifically. I'm fairly sure I know most of them, but I want to really know why you run what you do. In return, I will give you my experiences with the browsers that I have tried and why I hopped from them if I did.

Don't feel the need to read the list. I'll be more than happy to just hear your answers!

  • Firefox: One of the grand-daddy browsers. I honestly didn't hop from it due to anything specific, but more that I've used it so much that I needed a change.
  • Chrome: I used this very little. Just being on it made my skin crawl. However, I still keep it around in a container because some sites straight up tell you that you have to use it to access their dashboards or application forms. While that is now much less these days (as most things will now ask for Chrome or Firefox now), it still does happen, especially on dated government sites that get updated like... once a decade...
  • Opera GX: Yup, I fell into the hype. I think I used this for all of a month before recognizing it as over-engineered and needlessly bloated. It pulls you in with gimmicks and pretty lights and that's pretty much all it has. A browser that's literally built on smoke and mirrors and pushy advertising.
  • Brave: There's been a lot of huff about Brave lately, but back when it launched and wasn't very mainstream it was the smoothest and a relatively more secure browser than the competition. There was a time when nearly everyone ran Brave. The problem started when they began to opt you into gimmicks and extra things you didn't need without your permission. That was a turnoff for me. I outed before things really went downhill. -Floorp: A random find from exploring Linux for the first time. I was running Pop!_OS and found it on the store. I've never experienced such a smooth Firefox fork before. It really is barebones, but has a lot of customization built in. Instead of the custom options piling on one another, most of them change how it works on a foundational level. The style of your UI and tabs, side tabs, fading URL bar buttons, and a lot more. At it's core, Floorp is a stripped down and security first FF fork developed in Japan. I took the time to translate the TOS pages, and most of it is promising that there is no data collection. It's fairly vetted and trusted from what I've researched.
  • Vivaldi: Still one of my favorite browsers when I went back to Windows, but probably has the most bugs I've seen in any browser. It got better once they swapped to React portals, but Vivaldi (Windows version) would occasionally freeze my whole PC or else I'd BSOD. This was a combination of the browser's stability and making my own custom CSS for it, but overall it frustrated me more than other browsers.
  • Qutebrowser: Still one of my favorites, and a must-have for me even if its not my main browser. I was diving into the Vimium extension for Firefox, which in turn led me to Neovim, which led me to Qutebrowser. There's a few main points as to why I don't use it as my go-to. First, its not very good at squashing first-party ads. Even though you can combo custom ad block lists, Brave adblock, and python-adblock, it just can't seem to get them all. Second, I rely on my history when browsing YouTube and if you want to get around ads, your best bet is to write a custom shortcut that opens links in MPV/VLC. There are Greasemonkey scripts that should increase ad speed to a fraction of a second and auto-skip, but none of them ever worked for me and most are ancient.
  • Nyxt: My next logical step after Qutebrowser was Nyxt. However, I've never managed to figure out how to work it. I haven't really done any extensive bug testing, but when it opens its just a blank window and there's not much I could find for documentation on it. Part of me wonders if there's something that only trusted people know that gets it working, the other part wonders if I'm just missing some sort of library or dependency. From here I went back to Floorp for a while. -Zen: I was very excited when I found this browser. Another Firefox fork, it aims to be much like Arc browser, but adds a lot more on top of that. However, in recent months I find they've become a little too ambitious. If you asked me two months ago, I would tell you that Zen felt just as smooth as Floorp, but these days its much, much laggier. The scrolling is choppy, the pages load slow. I use the same exact extensions on Zen as I do Floorp and the difference now is night and day. I've also tested this on fresh, no-extras no-extension installations and the results are the same. Zen tends to change things and instead of letting the user opt into the additions or changes, they force the changes in their updates. That type of development model just isn't really for me. I don't want to have to re-figure out how to use my browser every few days.

So there it is. I hop a LOT. Honorable mention is Ladybird and I've tested it a little. It is extremely alpha, being just a portal with the basics you need for browsing, but I'm amazed at what they've done so far and very excited for it's release. For now I've returned to Floorp and am very happy with it. I'm very curious to know why you like what you do, whether its just because its what you've used for a long time or if there's something that you can't do without.

Also, please excuse me if this question has been asked before. I didn't want to necro an old post and I want to be able to reply and ask more questions! I've seen many posts discussing a single browser, but I want a more general view. I'm very interested, because the Lemmy community often values their privacy and their rights, which is a major factor in choosing software for me.

Edit: I feel like I'm answering very quickly, but want you to know that I'm not a bot nor using AI. I type at 110wpm in Dvorak. Typing is a huge hobby of mine and would never use AI to do something I love to do for me. I'm set on getting to 200wpm (100 was my first goal). That being said, I can't answer everyone, so I'm sorry if I missed your reply!

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[-] [email protected] 3 points 6 days ago

Ironfox here, through Tor and ProtonVPN.

[-] [email protected] 2 points 6 days ago

I started using Zen recently. I really like being able to get rid of all menus when I don't need them. I don't like it that much stock though and wish all of the customisation I did was easily transferable between devices, at the moment only some basic config is stored via Mozilla sync for some reason.

[-] [email protected] 2 points 6 days ago

I use IronFox, because it's supposed to be a privacy-focused browser. I also liked the Kiwi browser before they got bought out by Microsoft or whatever happened to them. If a site I trust isn't working in IronFox, I'll use either Firefox or Firefox Nightly as an alternative. I really enjoy Hermit as well, although often I'll forget I even have that app. It's very useful though.

[-] [email protected] 2 points 6 days ago

Over the last two and half years (since I quit Windows and Vivaldi and went FLOSS only), bouncing around between Firefox, Floorp, Zen, Firedragon and Falkon as my principal browser, while also checking out Pale Moon, Servo, Dillo, Netsurf, Agregore, Kristall. Also "special purpose browsers" like Station, Ferdium and FreeTube. (Is FreeTube a browser? I think it's an Electron app, which is basically a Blink/Chromium browser, used to browse just one website in this case.)

Currently on my laptop:

  • Fully-loaded Zen (multiple extensions and a couple of Zen mods) as my main browser
  • Fairly minimal Firefox (just uBlock Origin and Privacy Badger) for streaming music (e.g Spotify without ads)
  • Ferdium for email and IM
  • FreeTube for YouTube (LibRedirect extension in Zen sends YT links to FreeTube automatically)
  • Ungoogled Chromium as a backup in case some site just won't work with a non-Blink browser. Haven't used it in months.
[-] [email protected] 1 points 6 days ago

Firefox, Floor and Brave (Brave to play DRM content)

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[-] [email protected] 0 points 6 days ago

Brave. It blocks all the ads and syncs with my phone. That's all I want. I like using Librewolf more (with uBlock Origin) but it doesnt sync with my phone so I can't really use it as a daily driver

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[-] [email protected] 62 points 1 week ago

Librewolf. It does everything i need, and nothing i don't. It doesn't have bloatware or adware, and it respects my privacy. That's all I care about, besides that it can still do everything I need a browser to do.

[-] [email protected] 11 points 1 week ago

I need to try Librewolf. I've seen the praises it gets here on Lemmy. I've been holding off, because I feel like Floorp is very similar. I may try Firedragon as well, but I feel like it may be rather bloated as far as FF forks go.

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[-] [email protected] 7 points 1 week ago

I've tried a good amount of Firefox forks and Librewolf is hands down my fav. God tier browser imo

[-] [email protected] 49 points 1 week ago

There was a time when nearly everyone ran Brave

Wut

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[-] [email protected] 43 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

Firefox.

Because it's not Chromium based so it's not subject to any changes to the underlying code that might do something stupid like stop ad blockers from working.

I had been using FireFox since it's launch. The only reason I ever switch to Chrome originally was because, at the time, Firefox was crashing like every 10 minutes after an update it had. Chrome ended up being faster and, at that time, used less resources.

Switched back the moment news about Manifest V3 started being reported on a few years back.

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[-] [email protected] 30 points 1 week ago

I use Firefox but I'm keeping my eye on Ladybird

[-] [email protected] 15 points 1 week ago

Ladybird is the most exciting thing to happen to browsers. Madlads really doing it, building from the ground up. I have mad respect for them. I gotta see if they have a donation page and give them some support. I want this to work and blow everything else out of the water.

[-] [email protected] 4 points 1 week ago

For sure! I only heard about it recently but it's so exciting and they've already made so much progress. I'll definitely be switching once it's deemed to be in a releasable state.

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[-] [email protected] 14 points 1 week ago

LibreWolf, I've been using Firefox ever since I switched from Mozilla browser, but nowadays with what Mozilla is doing I felt compelled to switch to LibreWolf and IronFox.

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[-] [email protected] 7 points 1 week ago

https://www.privacyguides.org/en/desktop-browsers/

The default browser for any operating system that isn't created by Microsoft or Google is probably suitable for most people.

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[-] [email protected] 6 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

No one mentioned Floorp yet, so I guess it's on me.

It's Firefox, but with more customization options right out of the box. I also have an ungoogled Chromium on standby for those sites unwilling to work well with Firefox (and forks).


EDIT:

Oh, it's mentioned in the OP:

  • Floorp: A random find from exploring Linux for the first time. I was running Pop!_OS and found it on the store. I’ve never experienced such a smooth Firefox fork before. It really is barebones, but has a lot of customization built in. Instead of the custom options piling on one another, most of them change how it works on a foundational level. The style of your UI and tabs, side tabs, fading URL bar buttons, and a lot more. At it’s core, Floorp is a stripped down and security first FF fork developed in Japan. I took the time to translate the TOS pages, and most of it is promising that there is no data collection. It’s fairly vetted and trusted from what I’ve researched.
[-] [email protected] 3 points 1 week ago

Yeah, Floorp is my go-to right now. Its incredibly lightweight and has a lot of customization for how smooth it is. I am liking Librewolf though, just from how completely stripped down it is. There's barely anything unneeded in the options, its crazy. I think I'll still mainly use Floorp, though.

[-] [email protected] 2 points 6 days ago

I actually had this trajectory: Vanilla Firefox -> (manually) hardened Firefox -> Librewolf -> Floorp

I wasn't actually displeased with Librewolf, but I found it a bit sparse when it comes to customization. I am aware that I'm trading customization with security when I made the last jump, but given my opsec situation, I don't think I am being careless with switching to Floorp, and it has some decent security defaults, so I stuck with it.

Everyone else's usecases may vary and even Floorp with its customization options isn't for everyone. That's the beauty of Firefox and its forks, if you ask me. There's likely something for everyone--and for some, Firefox might be it.

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[-] [email protected] 6 points 1 week ago

Firefox.

I can personalize it as much as I want and it respects my privacy, or at least any part that doesn't can be easily turned off.

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[-] [email protected] 6 points 1 week ago

I use Firefox and Librewolf.

I've used Firefox for a long tine, and I strongly favour it as the only true independent browser engine left. Everything else is under Google or Apples control, and many of the various chrome forks are commercial and compromised. I dont trust Brave or Vivaldi in terms of privacy. And google has severely limited privacy options in chromium based browsers with its recent changes.

Mozilla is far from perfect and I'm disturbed by some of its actions but it remains the least bad option. Librewolf adds a layer of privacy and separation that I like although its not my main browser. I main Firefox with lots of privacy extensions.

I do have chromiun and chromium ungoogled installed and exclusively for streaming video. Not because Firefox isn't capable but because I have loads of extensions in Firefox so its easier just to contain all my subscribed streaming services in its own browser and not have to faff with DRM or ad block issues. I watch YouTube in Firefox, but use Chromium to watch BBC, Channel 4, and Netflix (when I had it). I use Jellyfin media player to stream my own content.

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[-] [email protected] 5 points 1 week ago

For home: Firefox. I've tried the forks and I always hate something about them more than whatever good they offer.

Work: Chrome. I don't really have much of a choice.

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[-] [email protected] 4 points 1 week ago

Mostly vivaldi, but I've been experimenting with Zen too, a Firefox fork. I really liked what I've seen so far. The layout is unique, workspaces and tab management is pretty nice.

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[-] [email protected] 4 points 1 week ago

From my top browsers, Librewolf and Brave Browser are probably in first place. Librewolf is, of course, better in terms of privacy, but I like Brave Browser because it performs better. I compared their performance on an old laptop, and Brave really works better. These are two open-source browsers, and there probably aren't any better ones, in principle.

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[-] [email protected] 4 points 1 week ago

Firefox. It was the default in Linux Mint when I first started using a computer, and I am used to it. (Yep, I started with Linux.)

On my phone, shamefully Opera. It's the best for desktop web experience. I don't like mobile websites.

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[-] [email protected] 4 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

Firefox (long term user) and my backup is Brave (in case something isn't displaying right) and my extra backup is Chrome which I hope to never use. And then there's IE that I used to download those.

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this post was submitted on 29 May 2025
123 points (96.2% liked)

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