I have been trapped in the Chrome ecosystem for over a decade, accepting the memory bloat and ad-clutter as a necessary evil. But when I saw the announcement for Perplexity's new "Comet" browser landing on Android this week, I knew I had to test it immediately. Is it just another wrapper around a search engine, or does it actually change how we interact with the web on mobile?
Comet is shockingly fast and the "Context-Aware" search bar is brilliant for research. However, if you rely heavily on legacy Chrome extensions or password sync across non-Android devices, you might find the transition difficult right now.
1. What is Perplexity Comet?
Perplexity Comet is an AI-native mobile browser that replaces the traditional search-engine-to-website loop with a conversational interface that summarizes web content directly within the viewport. Unlike standard browsers that passively load pages, Comet actively scans the page content to offer instant summaries, fact-checks, and related queries without you needing to leave the tab. After setting it as my default browser for 48 hours, the difference in information density is palpable. It feels less like surfing a directory and more like conversing with an intelligent agent that reads the web for you.
2. Deep Dive: Performance & AI Integration
The core appeal of Comet on Android is its proprietary "answer engine" which bypasses the need to click through multiple blue links to find a simple answer. In my testing, this wasn't just a gimmick—it fundamentally sped up my workflow. When I searched for "best mid-range GPU 2025," I didn't get a list of SEO-spam articles. I got a comparison table generated instantly.
However, performance isn't just about AI. I noticed the browser is incredibly lightweight. On my device, pages loaded roughly 30% faster than Chrome, likely because Comet aggressively blocks trackers and heavy ad-scripts by default. It feels snappy, responsive, and oddly quiet compared to the noisy visual environment of other browsers.
👍 What I Liked
- Zero-Click Answers: The browser answers questions before I even finish typing the URL.
- Reader Mode 2.0: It doesn't just strip ads; it restructures the article with AI highlights.
- Battery Efficiency: My phone ran cooler compared to heavy sessions in Arc Search.
👎 What I Hated
- Extension Gap: No support for my essential password manager extension yet.
- Gesture Learning Curve: The navigation relies on swipes that took me a day to memorize.
| Feature | Perplexity Comet | Google Chrome | Arc Search |
|---|---|---|---|
| AI Summary | Native (Default) | Optional (Gemini) | Native ("Browse for me") |
| Ad Blocking | Aggressive | Basic | Aggressive |
| Privacy | High (No Tracking) | Low | High |
3. Critical Comparisons: Comet vs. Arc Search
The most direct competitor to Comet isn't Chrome, but the "Browse for Me" feature in Arc Search, and the difference lies in citation accuracy. During my tests, Arc sometimes hallucinated details when summarizing complex news. Comet, leveraging Perplexity's established index, provided citations for every single claim. If you are a student or researcher, this distinction is vital. I found myself trusting Comet's output significantly more, whereas I still felt the need to double-check Arc's summaries.
4. Final Conclusion
Perplexity Comet is a mature, polished entry into the browser wars that finally gives Android users a viable, high-IQ alternative to Chrome. While the lack of extensions is a pain point I hope they address in upcoming patches, the sheer speed and utility of the AI features make it my new daily driver. If you value information over navigation, this is an instant download.
Are you ready to trust AI to summarize the web for you, or do you prefer the control of traditional browsing? Let me know in the comments.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Perplexity Comet free on Android?
Yes, the browser is free to download and use. However, accessing the advanced "Pro" AI models for deeper research requires a Perplexity Pro subscription.
Does Comet support Chrome Extensions?
Currently, no. Comet runs on a custom engine designed for speed and AI integration, so it does not support the Chrome Web Store ecosystem at launch.
Is it safe to log in to bank accounts on Comet?
Yes, Comet uses standard encryption protocols and sandboxing for security. I found no security red flags during my usage, though it lacks the long-term reputation of established browsers.
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