Whoever decided that Google Chrome’s settings menu should be coded in HTML… ugh, that should be a fireable offense for such stupidity, haha. (I kid, if that wasn’t already obvious…)

Anyway, what browsers I use depends on what system I’m using. On PC, I almost exclusively use Firefox. A simple, no-nonsense, just-works-the-way-it-should(-most-of-the-time) browser, with extensions galore for all kinds of purposes. On my iPad, meanwhile, there are three browsers that I use: Safari, Edge, and Firefox Focus. The latter I use almost exclusively for Bulbagarden. Edge is for e-mail, making purchases, and other “important” things, while Safari is for general browsing. All of them are basically skins of the iPad’s underlying WebKit engine anyway, so it really just comes down to extra features when it comes to which browser I choose for any given purpose.

Now, as for whether I use browsers on PC or iPad more, it depends. Safari on iPad has said device’s touchscreen interface along with its high-resolution screen to make things quite pleasant for casual browsing of the internet. But as with many things on iPad, there’s only so much that you’re allowed to do with the settings menu (is a cookies or JavaScript whitelist really too complicated for Apple to include?), and even add-ons only help but so much (assuming that they even work all of the time). It’s the main reason why I feel the need to use multiple browsers on iPad, actually. And Firefox on PC remains my go-to for more serious things that require a lot of downloads and such, given that Windows is still the primary target platform for a lot of very useful software.