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Google brings Chrome browser to Linux machines in Q2 2026

Google officially announced that its flagship Chrome browser is coming to ARM64 Linux devices in Q2 2026.

While Chrome has been available for Intel/AMD (x86) Linux for years, this update finally brings the “official” Google-branded experience to the rapidly growing ecosystem of ARM-powered Linux hardware, such as the Raspberry Pi, Snapdragon-based laptops, and Macs running Asahi Linux.


The “Missing Link” in the ARM Trifecta

This release completes a multi-year effort by Google to support the ARM architecture across all major desktop operating systems.

  • The Timeline: Google launched ARM-native Chrome for macOS (M-series) in 2020 and for Windows on ARM in 2024. Linux was the final major platform awaiting an official binary.
  • Why it Matters: Until now, ARM Linux users had to rely on Chromium (the open-source foundation). While Chromium is solid, it lacks “official” features like Google Account Sync, native DRM for high-quality video playback (Netflix/Prime), and integrated Google Pay/Password Manager support.

Key Features for ARM64 Linux

The Q2 2026 release (scheduled between April and June) will provide a “no-compromise” experience:

  • Native Performance: Optimized for high-performance ARM chips like the Snapdragon X Elite and NVIDIA’s Grace Blackwell architecture.
  • Full Sync: Seamlessly synchronize bookmarks, tabs, and history across your Android phone, Windows PC, and ARM Linux machine.
  • Enhanced Security: Includes Googleโ€™s Safe Browsing with AI-powered Enhanced Protection and the integrated Google Password Manager with breach monitoring.
  • Web Store Access: Direct, native access to the Chrome Web Store without needing specialized developer workarounds or “wrappers.”

Hardware Partnerships & Availability

  • NVIDIA DGX Spark: Google is specifically partnering with NVIDIA to streamline Chrome installation on the DGX Spark, a compact AI supercomputing device.
  • Distro Support: Google plans to offer official Debian (.deb) and RPM (.rpm) binaries, making it easy to install on Ubuntu, Fedora, Debian, and openSUSE.
  • Where to Download: Once launched in Q2, the ARM64 version will be automatically detected and offered on the standard google.com/chrome download page.

Industry Context

Analysts view this as a strategic move to support the “Year of Linux on the ARM Desktop.” With Windows 11’s increasing focus on AI (Recall/Copilot) causing some privacy-conscious users to migrate to Linux, Google wants to ensure its ecosystem remains the default gateway to the web, regardless of the underlying OS.

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