Ryan Haines / Android Authority
I’ve been on the Chrome bandwagon for years now and it remains my go-to browser even today. But let’s just say, I haven’t been entirely faithful to Chrome. Over the years, I’ve dabbled in a wide variety of browsers ranging from Edge to modern AI-infused alternatives to see what I might be missing out on. And while I keep coming back to Chrome, it’s clear to me that Google has been playing it safe.
I haven’t been entirely faithful to Chrome, and that’s exactly why I know it can do better.
Google’s been so focused on stability, performance, and ecosystem integration that it’s lost some of the ambition that made Chrome exciting in the first place. Meanwhile, competitors like Edge, Vivaldi, Samsung Internet, and even Opera have been quietly adding genuinely useful features that make you question why Chrome doesn’t have them yet. Don’t get me wrong. For as much as we criticize Chrome, it still nails the basics like syncing across devices, a smart address bar, and unmatched integration with Google services. But that is exactly why it should be better. With the basics nailed down tight and mass acceptance by millions of users, now is the time for Chrome to raise the bar with a modern feature set.
So here’s a list of features I wish Chrome would just borrow already. In 2025, I wouldn’t call any of these features game changers. But most of them are table stakes that would make Chrome a better browser without compromising on what makes it great today. While most of these features are available across the desktop and mobile versions of the browsers, some are available only on the desktop version to account for available screen space.
Have you considered switching from Chrome to another browser? 25 votes I've already switched to Opera / Vivaldi / Edge / other. 72 % Not yet, but I'm considering it. 12 % Chrome has all the features I need. 16 %
Vertical tabs
Dhruv Bhutani / Android Authority
If you, like me, are a sucker for widescreen displays, you’ll know what I’m talking about. Once you’ve used a browser with vertical tabs, it’s hard to go back. Edge and Vivaldi get this right with implementations that let you stack dozens of tabs neatly along the side. It saves horizontal space, keeps tab titles or icons visible, and just makes sense for widescreen monitors.
Once you’ve used vertical tabs on a widescreen monitor, there’s no going back.
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