I Tested EVERY Modern Browser UI to find the BEST

Juxtopposed| 00:32:26|Mar 24, 2026
Chapters28
The video filmmaker reviews a wide range of alternative browsers, focusing on unique UIs, onboarding, privacy, memory usage, extensibility, and overall usability, using a set of criteria to evaluate each and ranking them into tiers.

Juxtopposed explores every modern browser UI, crowning Arc, Zen, and Orion for their standout design and customization.

Summary

Juxtopposed’s deep-dive over 32 minutes surveys a burst of browser UIs—from Chrome-friendly powerhouses to privacy-first grids, Arc-inspired surprises, and minimalist experiments. The creator explains a clear testing framework: onboarding, intrusiveness, customization, navigation, visual cleanliness, and tab management, with extensions, keyboard focus, and AI features also weighed. Chrome earns a solid tier for polish and familiar tab groups, while Edge’s Mac onboarding and customizable sidebar earn it a decent rating. Firefox lands in solid thanks to its customization options but with some UI quibbles. Florp is described as a stronger Firefox-based option, and Opera’s trio (GX, Air, and Opera) showcase different flavors, despite clunky settings. Vivaldi soars to the top for native theming and massive, well-organized options, earning the highest tier. Arc, Beam, Dia, Zen, Surf, Sigma OS, and a slew of Arc-style and privacy-focused browsers populate the amazing or mid tiers based on how thoughtfully they balance AI features, workflow tools, and UI coherence. The video also nods to truly minimal or keyboard-centric options like Min, VE (Vim-style), Nyx, and Cute Browser, highlighting how approach to UI changes user focus and productivity. Throughout, Juxtopposed notes ongoing development, curious experiments, and the broader trend of browsers blurring lines between UI elegance and agentic AI capabilities. The piece closes by inviting viewer opinions on their favorite UI and what the next big leap might look like.

Key Takeaways

  • Vivaldi earns the highest tier for its massive native customization, including toolbar, sidebar, and status bar reconfigurations.
  • Arc Browser earns an amazing tier for its minimal UI, gesture controls, vertical tabs, and strong AI/notes features that tie into a productive browsing workflow.
  • Opera’s GX/Air trio shows how branding and optional feature packs can coexist with solid onboarding, even as the settings layout can hinder quick access.
  • Zen Browser is praised for its Firefox-based customization, lightweight feel, and strong UI polish that outshines Arc in some cases.

Who Is This For?

Essential viewing for power users who value UI customization, keyboard-driven navigation, and AI-assisted browsing. It’s especially helpful for readers deciding which browser design best fits their workflow or considering switching from Chrome or Firefox.

Notable Quotes

"I looked up a list of browsers hoping that such a thing exists."
Juxtopposed explains the scope and sourcing strategy for the browser tour.
"In Edge, the sidebar can house all sorts of apps and AI chat boxes."
Highlighting Edge's notable UI feature that differentiates it from Chrome.
"Vivaldi is very well thought out and it deserves the highest tier."
Juxtopposed’s verdict on Vivaldi’s design philosophy and feature density.
"Arc has everything that the other browsers have and more."
Summarizing Arc’s comprehensive feature set and design focus.
"Beam is still there if you want to use it, but since they mentioned Arc Browser in their last message, let's go give that a try."
Noting Beam’s place in the broader field and segue to Arc.

Questions This Video Answers

  • What makes Vivaldi’s UI stand out compared to Chrome and Edge?
  • Which browsers offer the best keyboard-driven navigation for power users?
  • How do Arc and Zen compare in terms of AI features and customization?
Browser UIArc BrowserVivaldiZen BrowserOpera GXOpera AirEdgeFirefoxChromium-based browsersAI in browsers
Full Transcript
Ah, yes. Browsers. For the past god knows how many years, I've heard the names of different browsers being thrown around as alternatives to Chrome, Firefox, and Safari. Just use R. Have you tried Oprah GX? Zen browser. Do you even know? Clearly never used enough. I'll have to see for myself. My eyes saw every browser as one of these. Under the hood, some of these might just be Chrome or Firefox, but it's the interface that makes a difference. Well, that and privacy and memory usage and But that's not the point. This is a UI video. So, I looked up a list of browsers hoping that such a thing exists. And of course, it did. I found this really helpful GitHub page with an almost full list of desktop browsers and a few other browsers that weren't on that list. And that's where the grind began. I searched, installed, and tested every browser I found, looking for ones with more unique UIs. Some I've used before, some I've never even heard of, and finally came up with a set of criteria to put them to test. the onboarding, how intrusive it is, how much you can customize it, how easy it is to navigate, if it's clean and clutter-free, if it follows every UI principle, and if it has enough features to manage tabs. I also keep an eye out for extension support, keyboard focused browsers, aesthetically pleasing or unique designs, extras like note-taking and stuff, and AI features. These are not my criteria for rating, but I still like to consider them. Finally, I'm going to put the browsers in this tier list. Let me start with the most popular one, Google Chrome. Its onboarding is pretty simple. It asks you to enter a name and customize the theme and after that it basically leaves you alone. I understand this mostly because it's widely adopted but still it gets the full point. I'd say Chrome's design is polished. Consistent icons and design language. Navigating in Chrome is simple, probably the most widely recognized. You open a tab like this, right click on it, add it to a tab group, label the group with a name and color, drag other tabs into the group, and it labels them with this line. You can then collapse and expand the tab group to reserve space. And using this button, you can search all your tabs and tab groups. Pretty simple. Everything else you can find in here, extensions, history, downloads, etc. You can customize your toolbar by adding whichever one of these options you want and dragging them around to your liking. Interestingly, Chrome supports all the extensions in the Chrome Web Store. Well, almost all. Since this is the biggest extension store ever, you'll find it on many other browsers, too. And that's Chrome for you, which makes it to the solid tier. That being said, I stopped using Chrome a long time ago. And if you're still using it, I'm kind of curious to know if you would switch to something else by the end of this video or not. The next browser is the world's most used browser to download Chrome, Microsoft Edge. We're often so mean to it. So, to show my good faith and actually give Edge a try, I decided to download and install Edge on Mac OS. Hey, Microsoft, I want to bash for this, by the way. The onboarding was pretty simple. It asked me if I want to set it as my default browser, if I want to make a Microsoft account. No, and a bunch of other visual preferences. Wait, I didn't know Edge had vertical tabs. That was the beginning of my journey. Ow, that's not nice. The other icons were fortunately more consistent, and the UI follows most principles. Though, there are some inconsistencies here and there, like this one or this one. They just don't belong when you compare them to the other boxes. I tried customizing everything from the theme to the tab layout and the sidebar. See, we've just entered the realm of browsers with a sidebar. They give you the chance to fit some of the stuff you use regularly in the sidebar instead of opening them in a pop-up or an full page like Chrome. And in Edge, the sidebar can house all sorts of apps and AI chat boxes. But a good sidebar in a browser is a sidebar that is customizable and not just more room for clutter. So in Edge, you can remove all of this if you don't like it. There are a lot of nice features to enhance your edging experience, like creating a tab collection to check out later without keeping all the tabs open, screenshotting anywhere on the page you want, or creating a split screen. Another great thing is that you get both Edge add-ons and Chrome extensions. I think Edge is worth at least one honest try. And well, I did my honest trial and I'm putting it in the decent tier. Now it's time for Firefox. The whole onboarding was pretty smooth and Firefox's layout looks pretty simple and everything is where you expect it to be. The icons are pretty consistent and give proper feedback like the cybar icon that perfectly captures the expected outcome from clicking on it. Though I don't know why the AI chatbot and recent browsing have the same icon. Hm. Or why different icons have completely different container sizes and paddings. Then there are some inconsistencies like the sidebar font is so huge in the settings but way smaller in the Firefox view or how there are two manage bookmark buttons in here. Now to make the browser really mine I'm going to add a color to the background. But that's about it for the native theme options. Luckily Firefox supports way more extensive themes too that can make it look completely different. I like how the toolbar customization is way easier than Chrome and there are actually some really handy settings. I can't remove the address bar which is such a shame though I can add a search engine bar. I tried customizing the sidebar, too, but besides showing or hiding these options and switching to vertical tabs, there's not much else. I can't add more stuff here, which I assume it's because they need to coexist with vertical tabs, so they can't be too many. Firefox has the same basic tab management capabilities as Chrome. And fortunately, Firefox supports the Firefox add-ons, which is a nice selection of all sorts of extensions and themes. Now, let's talk about the elephant in the room, the AI chat. You basically select an AI sighting with your account and every time you're on a page, you can highlight a certain chunk of text and use these available commands. It's going to be interesting comparing this with other browsers. After considering all the aspects and giving it way too much thought, I decided to put Firefox in the solid tier. I've heard of this other Firefox-based browser a lot. It's called Florp. The layout and UI are really similar to Firefox, but when it comes to native customization, Florp sends Firefox home. There are so many things to customize, I can't even name them all. There are also some more tab positions and extra tab options like multiro tabs. You can customize all the keyboard shortcuts and all the icons in the sidebar, too. Though Florp kind of misses when it comes to navigation. The sidebar is really cool and gives you quick access to everything you might want, note-taking, different web apps, and so on. But it's also a little confusing. I have my bookmarks, history, and stuff here. Cool. What happens if I click on this? Oh, and to make it worse, if I choose vertical tabs, I get this. Also, why are the icons so confusing? Two back buttons. No, this one reopens closed tabs. Two reload buttons. No, this one just switches the sidebar position. I understand that it's super customizable and you can get all the duplicates out of your way, but I don't understand why there are duplicates in the first place. All this aside, I think Florp is a much stronger Firefox, so I'm putting it in the amazing tier. Other Firefox-based browsers like Tour Browser for accessing the tour network or Libriwolf, which is a privacy focused fork of Firefox, have a very similar UI to Firefox, but are way more minimal with fewer customization options, so I'm putting them in mid. Hey, there's nothing wrong with being mid. Duck. Go is another privacy focused browser. It had a really cool intro. I loved the animations and how it introduced me to different features interactively. And then the layout was very familiar and easy to use, yet with a unique style of its own that's polished and consistent. I especially like the icons. They actually helped me navigate the browser much faster. I think it's partly because they're colorcoded, though I was a little disappointed when I found not so many things to customize. Well, it's funny because the search engine offers a lot more for that. The toolbar up here seems to be pretty empty, and there's not much to modify about it except adding or removing these set options. It's actually the least cluttered browser I've seen so far. Like, you couldn't collaterate if you wanted to. I also noticed this AI chatbot icon for duck AI which opens in a new tab and allows you to chat with different models without saving your history. Also, unless you remove the icon in the settings, it's always in the address bar. Same as these two reminders to pin duck.go to the taskbar or set it as your default browser. I mean, I kind of expect the options to open a new tab or incognito tab first thing here, but instead I see these. You know what? Let me just Okay, so there is no way to get rid of them. What happened to don't ask again. One cool thing about the browser though is the way they use fire to burn the data you don't want saved. It literally burns. You can pin tabs or fireproof them, aka saving your data when you're burning everything else, but there's no tab grouping or any other tab managing capability. Finally, the Duck.Go browser doesn't support any third party extensions. Wait, what? Did I read that correctly? Oh, it seems like I did. I don't know how to feel about that. In general, Duck.Go Go is a simple browser with a pretty UI and I'm putting it in the mid tier before moving on to yet another privacy focused browser. A fan favorite, a cult classic, Brave browser. It did have an onboarding, but there was only one question about my preferences and three about Brave itself like set it as my default browser or if I want to share anonymous search signals or product insights and that was it. No theme selection or anything else. Right off the bat, I noticed a lot of Brave branded things like Brave Talk. Call your friends. Brave WPN that has a free trial. Brave rewards that give you tokens for the private ads you see in Brave. Whoa, whoa, whoa. What? Fortunately, it's totally optional and I turned it off. Then you have Leo AI, which is available as a whole tab and on the sidebar and answers questions based on the current page content. And there's Brave Wallet. The good thing is you can hide all of these if you want to. Speaking of that, there are other things to customize too, like vertical tabs or keyboard shortcuts or different elements here and there. Sometimes they work, sometimes they don't. But you can't customize a toolbar or change your theme without installing them from the extension store. Since Brave is based on Chromium, it shares a lot of UI elements with it. Though, they've designed their own set of icons to match their own features. The animations and transitions are a little goofy, and I feel like a lot of the UI elements could improve. Like this navigation bar is too saturated, and the red started hurting my eyes after a while. I know it's their color, but it doesn't have to be shoved somewhere in the UI like this. and barely anywhere else. You have the sidebar over here that opens bookmarks or reading lists and other Brave products right in the sidebar. But if you add a new website or app to it, it just acts as a quick access button that opens the site in full screen, not the sidebar. Wow, I wonder where I got the impression that it might do that. And the settings icon just takes you to the settings page with the word sidebar being searched. And going through this, I can see that there's no way to add a new section like downloads or history to open in the sidebar. This seems like such wasted potential despite the fact that Brave supports all the Chrome extensions and feels like a pretty utilitarian browser. For UI, it gets into the mid tier. The next browser is Vivaldi. The onboarding was sweet. It asked all the questions about my theme preferences, where I want to put my tabs in any of the four sites. The UI though, it is beautiful. Not only is everything styled in a unique way, but the UX in places like settings is pretty impressive, especially since there's like a gajillion options in the browser, but everything is categorized neatly and the animations are smooth. The layout is pretty familiar, too. And there's a sidebar where you could pin anything you want and it opens right in the sidebar. And because everything you need is accessible, there is no extra Chrome style menu. Everything is right here. The settings, zoom, capturing the screen, bookmarks, history, downloads, everything. And you can customize not just the themes or tabs, but also the toolbar up here, the sidebar over here, and the status bar at the bottom. You can completely change the way the browser looks like for yourself. Like you can make your own theme brick by brick and change even the icons all natively. There are more options than I could possibly talk about in this video. Tab management has a lot of features, too. I generally like all the quality of life features and helpful menus filled with options, but my only complaint is that sometimes when there are too many elements next to each other, there's just not enough contrast, especially with the background color. Finally, Vivaldi does support all Chrome extensions. In general, Vivaldi is very well thought out and it deserves the highest tier. Now, to wrap up the popular crossplatform browsers, it's time to test Oprah. I'll talk about the onboarding in a bit, but one thing that kind of weirded me out was how during the installation, all three Oprah browsers set themselves as default and pinned themselves to the taskbar, and the option to disable that behavior is initially hidden inside here. So, you would have to expand this and change it if you want. It was the first browser I've seen with this stealthy kind of behavior. The onboarding itself was pretty smooth, though. They asked me to select my preferences for a bunch of different things. The general layout of all these three Oprah browsers are very similar. I mean, they're literally the same, and the only different thing is the styling. Opera itself is like a middle ground. Opera GX is more gamery, and Opera Air is much calmer. As you can see, all of these browsers have lots of options to customize, both the general look and feel and the little details, which are way more in Opera GX. All that said, the settings are the exact problem I have with Oprah. All of the settings are on the same page, and you got to keep scrolling down or use these different section markers, and it kind of becomes confusing because these are just a bunch of random headings. There are tens of other important sections that are listed in no clear order. The only way to use it fast and easy is to use search. I don't know why it couldn't just be like every other browser. Oprah might not have a lot of tab managing features or even vertical tabs, but it kind of compensates with other extra features like resource monitoring, pin boards to save stuff for later or taking a break feature. I thought Oprah browsers only supported Oprah add-ons, but then I remembered they're Chromium, so you already know the deal. And there you have it. Three Oprah browsers for different types of people. gamers, non-gamers, and Animal Crossing players. Funny story, Oprah has an AI called Arya, and it answers questions in different modes, either while browsing or in the sidebar chat. But beside that, Oprah is working on a new AI browser called Oprah Neon. Well, this is an example of when a browser company, any browser company, sees agentic AI as a future of browsing, meaning an AI that will get tasks done for you and not just summarize a page. Interesting choice of example use case, by the way. Still, I'm really curious to see how widely these agentic AI browsers get adopted. On a completely irrelevant note, I just realized we haven't tried any Mac OS browsers. So, let's see how they work. Starting with Safari. Safari's design is pretty invisible and it doesn't have an introduction. It mainly has horizontal tabs, but vertical tabs are also visible inside the tab groups on the sidebar. If Safari looks too empty, it's because everything sits in the sidebar. I'd say if you come from another browser, Safari might look too barebone and soulless. It just follows Apple's design language. But if you don't like this, there are some customization options, mostly for the new page look. But just like many other Mac OS apps, the toolbar is fully customizable. You can even remove the address bar if for some reason you want to. Taps have two distinct looks, too. Even though you're probably going to have to say goodbye to this one because they removed it in Mac OS Tahoe. Now, let's actually use Safari. What can I say? It's all just that simple. The extension situation on Safari is even simpler. Safari doesn't support Chrome extensions and instead a limited selection of Safari extensions that you can get from the App Store. Now, I don't know with this mix of clean UI and lack of features where to put Safari. How about Decent? If you want a Safari that's more than decent, you have Orion. The movie in the beginning was pretty fun. 10 out of 10. And then I got to choose my own preferences, too. Orion is similar to Safari. So, if you're coming from there, and I'm sure you are, you're already familiar with it. the same simple layout, but everything you don't get on Safari, you get here sevenfold. There are so many more things to customize from themes to tab layout. And unlike Safari, it does have vertical tabs. That is without simultaneously seeing the horizontal tabs. Nice thing about Orion is that your tab groups aka windows are pretty well organized. All the options of what to view are up here and not taking space down here like Safari. The system works well, but it's a little buggy. Like opening windows from this menu tends to mess everything up. But this is just a nitpick compared to the massive amount of features on Orion. Like tweaks that allow you to modify the font, color, and even elements on the websites you visit. Or focus mode, which hides all the UI and then shows it when you hover near the edge, or the programmable button that does any action you want. So yeah, a fully feature-p packed toolbar. Surprisingly, Orion supports extensions from both the Chrome Web Store and Firefox add-ons. In general, it wouldn't be justice not to give Orion an A for amazing time to talk about the next generation. browsers have focused more on design. And speaking of design, I want to take a moment to thank today's sponsor, Mobin. Mobin is a massive library for design research and inspiration. Hundreds of thousands of screens from apps in every category are collected here with their design updates, so you can find great design examples for both apps and websites. You can search and browse among different categories, UI elements, and flows. Plus, their community is priceless. Everyone saved their favorite UX solutions and UI inspos into these collections and curated the best list you could ask for as a designer. Plus, the community can rate different apps. So, it's not just perfect designs, but actual feedback for real app designs that you can use in designing your own apps, too. And the best part is they keep adding new screens, apps, and features regularly. I even sent a request to the team to add a search history, and they did it in no time. Mob is my go-to, my goat 10 out of 10. You can use my link in the description to try Mobin for free. Are you obsessed with cool Yeah. Well, same. I started to feel bored after trying so many mainstream browsers until I came across this browser and I soon became obsessed right about the start of its on boarding. It was super interactive and it mostly relied on keyboard shortcuts for navigation. But that was half the fun. I don't know about you, but because I'm constantly doing research, note-taking like this is a lifesaver for me. I like the Obsidian Web Clipper in other browsers to save parts of web pages. But this is a really cool built-in feature, too. But that aside, the UI itself is super clean and there's somehow even less on the screen than Safari. And it handles tab groups in a simple way like Chrome. Another interesting thing I noticed about it is how each tab has its own address box, which saves a lot more space. And I like the little micro interactions, too. Now, there are three things lacking in Beam. Detailed customization, extensions, and uh updates. I wonder why all the cool projects got to get abandoned. All things considered, I'd still say Beam is pretty decent. Beam is still there if you want to use it, but since they mentioned Arc Browser in their last message, let's go give that a try. I hope that one's not abandoned. Arc Browser had so much hype around it in the beginning, and I kept wondering how good can it be. Until I installed it a year ago, and after seeing the onboarding with the theme selection, I realized why it's so hyped. Beside the clean visuals, really cool micro interactions, and a minimal UI focused on using vertical tabs, and lots and lots and lots of features under the hood, the entire idea of Arc was pretty new to me. It's gesture-based, but works well with keyboard shortcuts. And it doesn't look like it, but Arc has everything that the other browsers have and more. I heard some people like the AI features on Arc, which were mostly for quick searching or asking a quick question. Split screen is also a quick gesture away, though the AI chat won't have access to the other tabs contexts. And this is another AI feature that cleans everything up when I have too many tabs. Guess I can also make a folder from this. Huh, not bad. What else can I make? What's an easel? Okay, so it's basically a note-taking/doodling kind of thing. And the cool thing about it is I can go to any web page and capture whichever part of it and save it as an image to my easel. And what's a boost? Oh, it tweaks the websites. Ah, finally Evil's team. Let's see what other boosts we can find in the community. Wait, what? There's nothing. What's happening? Oh, they're working on a new browser called DIA. Well, we got to check it out. But before that, since Arc meets my criteria, I'm putting it in the amazing category. Now, on to DIA. Dia is currently in beta, so I'm not expecting too much from it, but the first impression was all right. Though the initial charm of Arc wasn't there. The browser itself looked pretty similar to Chrome with a bit of an artistic touch. tabs matching the page color and the animations here and there. But that aside, DIA seems heavily focused on AI. The search bar both searches the web and talks to the AI chat. I mean, if the query starts with a question, it prioritizes the chat. But if it doesn't, it searches Google, though both are available anyway. Then there's an AI chat sidebar on every tab that uses a tab's context or anything else that you tag. Could be other tabs or browsing history. So, the chat is much more personalized than what we've seen in other browsers. And that's pretty much all that the UI has to offer. There's very limited customization and vertical tabs were added later to satisfy Arc users. I just wish appearance settings were less scattered here and there and not everything was shoved inside one app menu. There's still a lot of room for improvement here and I'd say DIA is pretty mid. In the meantime, I'm excited to check out another Arcstyle browser called Zen. Zen's on boarding was as calm as the name and helped me set up everything I wanted, though I wish I could get an actual preview of the theme settings because nothing was visible for me. Zen's overall layout and design is pretty similar to Arc, but unlike Arc, it's based on Firefox and it's much more customizable than Arc. Like, beside the fact that there are multiple layout options, the toolbar is entirely customizable, too. There are a lot more things to customize in the settings, like there's this mod store with mods that users created. The customization is probably my favorite thing about Zen. Though, I got to admit that Zen being generally more lightweight is the best thing about it. There's not much bloat, not too many extra features or UI elements here and there like art. just a good simple browser with every feature that Firefox has and it improves on a lot of things that Arc offered. The only nitpick I have is that I know there's a keyboard shortcut for toggling compact mode on and off, but I don't see an icon for it anywhere on the UI. I think Zen gets a lot of the UI points, and I'd put it in the amazing tier. There's another browser called Surf from Dead I think deserves way more attention. Surf had such an artistic and creative on boarding and I was instantly surprised to see that this is the first Arc style browser I've seen with a horizontal tap option. The UI has way less clutter like even this context menu was simpler compared to Arc. It mostly has a note-taking focused mixed with an AI chat that's pretty similar to DIA the way it handles context and answers questions about the open tabs. And contexts here are like workspaces. I guess I can modify them from here each of them with their own set of tabs. Wait, what? That animation was so cool. I kind of like these micro interactions and I don't know, it kind of motivates me to close my tabs more often. I used to be a very dedicated open tabs enthusiast, but over the years I've gotten used to closing my tabs very regularly. Like, I'm talking max three tabs open, and that's if I really need all of them at once. You might not be like me. It's okay. But seriously, close those tabs. Like, right now, I can see you. I also noticed that if I want to bookmark a tab, it gets saved the same way that a note does, which is a creative and different way of adding context to bookmarks. Look, the browser has a wholesome general outlook, but the details are a little off. Everything is everywhere, but some obvious things are missing. Like, if I'm on the notes page, why isn't there a button to create a new note? Finally, it looks like Surf supports a very limited number of Chrome extensions, but I think there's a lot of potential, so I'm putting it here. Another beautiful browser is Sigma OS. Okay, the onboarding is going pretty well. You can't be serious with this animation. Okay, there's a pro subscription. What for? Let's see. Oh, for the AI. Got it. I really like this step-by-step tutorial where different sections show up gradually. This browser is very unique in the way it approaches browsing as task management. Like here, I have a bunch of workspaces, each for a different project I'm working on. And to close a tab, I mark it as complete or lock it if I want it to just stay here, maybe snooze it, too. You might notice this colored outline here based on the website's colors. It's because of the magic theme that adapts as you browse. And yeah, that's pretty much all the visual customization you get. For other things though, there are a lot of built-in options to choose from. Search engine, password manager, ad blocker, or other interaction based features. Use WebKit for extension support. Okay, where are the extensions? Seriously, where are they? They're in the extensions panel. Oh, and the sidebar. It also supports Chrome extensions. So, let's check the Chrome web store. Okay, I don't think I can get these. Hm. Let me try removing this disabled attribute from the button. And still doesn't work. I guess these ones work for now. Beside all this, I really like the atrocious browser has to split screen. The way you can have any two tabs next to each other. Now, let's talk about the AI because it's everywhere. The basics are the same as DR or Surf, but the personalization UI is obviously well thought out and has a more simplified keyboard UX. To wrap it all up, Sigma OS has a unique UI, and for that, I'm putting it in this tier. Unrelated question, do you like horses? How about a browser with a horse on it? Horse browser is more than just a browser with a horse on its homepage and vertical tabs. It's made up of vertical trails of tabs designed for ADHD. In other browsers, after I open a new tab to search something, I lose track of the tab I was on before, so I start clicking around to find it. But here, I can open a new tab in the trail, so I know exactly where I was. And look how the other trails become less and less apparent the further down the trail I go. This actually helps me focus so much better. The browser is just so minimal and manages to fit so much in such little space. And I like the clean UI and the cute icons. But there are some things to consider. One, horse browser is paid with a 7-day free trial. Two, it doesn't have many options to customize it visually. Three, it doesn't support any extensions yet, but according to their road map, it's soon to come. And four, I know I can write notes wherever I want in the browser, but I can't find a way to save them. So, what's the point? I like horse browser, its UI, and what its mission is, but it feels like it still has a long way to go. So, I'm putting it in the minimal tier. Later, I found a similar browser, and it's called Mirror. This browser has a similar mission, too. Let's organize those tabs. And they showed me exactly how in the little onboarding movie. Basically, there are multiple workspaces and each of them have different sessions. Then inside each of these, there are very simple vertical tabs and a button to quickly make a new tab group. They're not really trails, but it's still possible to achieve some level of organization. And don't worry about all the open tabs because apparently they're put to sleep when they're not in use. I appreciate that there's a theme customization and I can hide or show the sidebars, but I wish there were more options like hiding the sessions up here. Regardless of the icon inconsistency or the need for UI refresh, mirror feels like a really simple solution to having multiple workspaces. And I'm putting it in there's potential. You know, there are other alternatives, too. Let's check out Cosmic. The idea is similar, but I feel like it's a bit more complicated than mirror. There's a sidebar with all the universes or topics, and they repeat again up here. Inside each universe, there's a big canvas for research and a little browser. I'm thankful to the document explaining how Cosmic works in the beginning because it took me a while to figure it out, but this layout kind of shocked me. I know I can collapse the sidebar, but there's still so much going on up here. If you look at the canvas like a desktop with a browser and an image viewer and a text editor, plus a huge space for research or making mood boards, it might make sense. The AI search up here creates a stack with the random search results. I'd personally rather just look at my options in a list instead and then capture the stuff I want. I know the UI is pretty neat, but the UIX could definitely improve. So, I'm putting it in. There's potential. Let's try the next alternative, Wavebox. In the beginning, I had to create an account on Wavebox and select a couple of different apps and websites for different parts of my life. My first impression of Wavebox was that it's based on Chrome, but with its own UI that sometimes feels out of place or inconsistent, especially when it comes to icons. The spacing or sizing feels kind of weird, too, but it's nothing that can't be fixed with a little refresh. Visuals aside, the browser is very capable. Like, I'm actually astonished by how many things I can customize and how detailed the customization settings page is. The idea of the browser is separating and managing different apps and websites from different aspects of life. I didn't like this layout too much, but there are other options that I like. More specifically, this one that looks more like vertical tabs with trails. In general, Wavebox works, but it really needs to improve visually. So, I'm putting it here. The next browser in the line was supposed to be Sidekick because of its similarity to Wavebox, but in the middle of my research, I realized it got shut down because they joined Purple's Comet browser. And yes, I got a free invite. So, let's pause and check Comet. The intro had a nice vibe to it. I don't know what's with the planets if it's just for customization or will serve some actual purpose later. The general UI doesn't immediately yell Chrome like Dia, which is good. And the toolbar is pretty simple overall. It mostly just hosts the AI buttons and the settings are in here, I guess. No, it's here. But this looks like the tap search icon on Chrome. I'm generally happy that the UI is so clean and focused on usability. Like the homepage with the widgets is pretty useful for all sorts of things you might want quick access to, especially prompts that you use often. All this aside, the whole point of Comet is the AI agent that gets things done on your behalf. So, let's give it a try. Seems like their example is how Comet solves today's Wordle. Doesn't always work though. I tried another website and it failed. So, I had to do it myself, which is like the wholeing point of Wordle. The search box comes with a lot of options, too, like this shortcut creator, so you don't have to repeat the same Prof. Just an idea though, maybe let me add some of these shortcuts next to these for even faster searching. Beside all this, Comet has almost every other basic Chrome feature. So, considering the UI and all, it's a decent browser. The next one is Biscuit. Kind of like Wavebox, which is a lot lot lot simpler. It's basically just the apps you use regularly. And there was no introduction to add your favorite apps to the sidebar. Just a few examples. Good thing I can go to another address from this app. Ah, yes, Google Drive. My favorite streaming platform. Let's make a new group. Well, hello Material 2. I'm going to add a bunch of different apps to it. And that's it. That's the browser. Yeah, there's a split screen and stuff, but that's mostly it. There's not a lot to customize here either, but I don't think you'd be bothered by that if you're choosing this browser. Biscuit is minimal, and the UI is not pretty, and therefore it's perfectly mid. Speaking of minimal, let's check out a browser that really puts the min in minimal. I love how there's a proper tour of it that teaches me how to use different things. To be honest, it's much more fun to use it with a keyboard and the shortcuts are mostly the same as the other browsers, so it's super easy to get started with it. There's not a lot to say. The browser mostly revolves around tasks and everything is accessible just by typing an exclamation mark in the address bar. And I can easily make my own commands, too. I actually switched to Min for a while for quick searching and distraction-free browsing and really enjoyed it. It's also kind of nice that the theme changes with every tap. The only thing Min lacks is proper extension support, but we are assessing the UI and based on that I'd put Min in. You'll never guess. At this point, I came across a bunch of other minimal browsers. I like these browsers a lot, especially Cargo because even the lack of interface is an interface itself, but I was so disappointed to realize that all of them were long gone just like Beam. What is it about minimal browsers? Is it like a curse? Is less not more when it comes to browsers? Because these browsers still work more or less, I want to put them in proper places on the tier list. But we're not done yet. We got keyboard focused browsers to try. Starting with VE, no, not Weeb. VE is like Vim for browsers. I can open a new tab, go on explore mode, search something, go up, go down, use a pointer to navigate, or go in follow mode to just navigate with keyboard shortcuts. I can search something on the page, then go back in history, close the current tab, then write a command to um I don't know, switch to vertical tabs, maybe. Oh, yeah, this browser is way more than you think and works just as fine with a mouse, too. And good news, it's still in development. I've been using it more and more since I've known about it, and it's really smooth and simple. So, I'm putting it in minimal. V has its own alternatives, too, like cute browser. The keyboard shortcuts here are way simpler and the UI is way way more minimal and there are very few mouse interactions. Is it cute? Well, debatable, but it's generally cleaner and fits a lot of information in tighter space. Plus, the shortcuts are a lot easier for me to remember. Cute browser is also still in development with an active community, so that's good news. And because of the barebone UI, it goes right here. You know what's next? Next. Come on. It was a little funny. Nyx had a steeper learning curve because the shortcuts were different. But Nyx narrows it all down to these two. And to be fair, they're pretty much enough to get started. I don't like memorizing things. So instead of looking at all the key bindings, I decided to search every command I needed and learn the shortcuts along the way. I realized that Nyx is much more powerful compared to V or Cube browser and is a billion times more customizable. And I would try customizing it if I knew the language, but because of all that, I can neither put it here nor here. So, I guess I'll pick an in between. I guess that wraps up my experience with these unique modern browsers. In general, I think Viva, Zen, and Orion are better versions of the big three, but browser UIs could still get even better. So, I'm excited to see the next big thing. So, what do you think? What's your favorite browser UI? Tell me in the comments. Well, that's all for this video. If you liked it, make sure you do your magic down below and see you on the next one.

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