Warning: Experimental features ahead! By enabling these features, you could lose browser data or compromise your security or privacy. Enabled features apply to all users of this browser. If you are an enterprise admin you should not be using these flags in production.
Interested in cool new Chrome features? Read our blogs.Enables using media keys to control the active media session. This requires MediaSessionService to be enabled too – Mac, Windows, Linux, ChromeOS
If enabled, Chrome uses the gainmap (if present) in AVIF images to render the HDR version on HDR displays and the SDR version on SDR displays. – Mac, Windows, Linux, ChromeOS, Android
Experimental security mode that strengthens the site isolation policy. Controls whether site isolation should use origins instead of scheme and eTLD+1. – Mac, Windows, Linux, ChromeOS, Android
The `FencedFrameConfig` constructor allows you to test the <fencedframe> element without running an ad auction, as you can manually supply a URL to navigate the fenced frame to. – Mac, Windows, Linux, ChromeOS, Android
Convenience flag for WebGPU development. Enables best-effort WebGPU support on unsupported configurations and more! Note that this flag could expose security issues to websites so only use it for your own development. – Mac, Windows, Linux, ChromeOS, Android
Forces use of high performance GPU if available. Warning: this flag may increase power consumption leading to shorter battery time. – Windows
Enables web applications to access WebGPU features intended only for use during development. – Mac, Windows, Linux, ChromeOS, Android
Show updated UI for Global Media Controls in all the non-CrOS desktop platforms. – Mac, Windows, Linux
When enabled, replaces synchronous GPU sync point validation with graph based validation – Mac, Windows, Linux, ChromeOS, Android
Enables Elastic Overscrolling on touchscreens and precision touchpads. – Windows, Android