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Brave got bloated. Firefox got shady. Here's the browser that actually does what they promised.
When most people decide to take their privacy seriously, they land on one of two browsers: Brave or Firefox. Both are genuinely good choices, far better than Chrome. But neither is the best option available, and the best option is one most people haven’t heard of.
It’s called Helium Browser. It’s open source, private by default, and minimal enough to stay out of your way. I’ve been using it for five months, and I think it’s worth a serious look.
Before we get to Helium, it’s worth being honest about why the two most popular privacy browsers fall short.
Brave does a lot right. It blocks ads, it’s Chromium-compatible, and it genuinely cares about privacy. But over the years, it has slowly accumulated things most users never asked for: Search, Rewards, Wallet, Leo AI, VPN, Talk, News, Premium. Most of it is optional, but it’s all there, baked into the browser, and the list keeps growing. If you just want a browser that stays out of your way, Brave increasingly doesn’t.
Firefox is a different kind of problem. On paper it’s the privacy-conscious choice. In practice, there are real reasons to be skeptical:

None of this makes Firefox or Brave bad browsers. But it does mean there’s room for something better.
Helium is built on ungoogled-chromium, a version of Chromium that strips out Google’s background services and tracking hooks, and then strips it further. The result is a browser with no telemetry, no crash reports phoning home, and privacy options turned on before you ever touch a setting.
The only extension that ships with it is uBlock Origin, which is itself open source and privacy-respecting. And while Google is actively working to limit uBlock Origin on Chrome through the MV3 transition, Helium preserves MV2 support, so you keep the full ad and tracker blocker working as intended.
You just need to install it, select your default search engine, and start using it. Helium even keeps privacy-friendly options at the top like Kagi and DuckDuckGo, while letting you select Google Search if you prefer.
This is the baseline most people expect from a “privacy browser,” but we rarely get without tweaking.
Every time you install or update a Chrome extension in any Chromium browser, your request goes directly to Google’s Chrome Web Store. Google can see which extensions you’re installing, when you’re installing them, and over time build a picture of your browser setup. This happens in Chrome, obviously, but also in Brave, Ungoogled Chromium, LibreWolf, and Zen Browser, and most other privacy-focused alternatives.
Helium routes these requests through its own proxy. When you install an extension, the request goes to Helium’s server first, which fetches it from Google on your behalf. Google sees the proxy, not you.
Also, there’s no change to your experience. You install extensions the same way, they work the same way. The data path is just different.
For those who don’t want to simply trust Helium’s servers, the entire service stack is open source and can be self-hosted. The proxy, the update checker, the uBlock filter fetcher, all of it can run on your own server if you want that level of control.
Helium isn’t for everyone, and it’s worth being upfront about the gaps.
There’s also a real-world risk that comes with any small-team browser: keeping pace with Chromium’s security patches. It’s worth keeping an eye on their GitHub release cadence to make sure you’re not running a version that’s weeks behind on a critical security fix.
Helium fits well if you’re a desktop user who wants a browser that doesn’t bundle things you never asked for, and where privacy is genuinely the default rather than something you have to configure.
If you stream a lot or need your browser on your phone, you’ll run into its limits quickly. It makes sense to keep a second browser for those cases, or wait for those gaps to close.
It’s not a perfect browser, and it’s still maturing. But if you’ve been frustrated with how Brave and Firefox have evolved, it’s a reasonable alternative that’s worth trying.
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