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The fall of Arc: Great design isn’t enough to save a browser
Arc wasn’t just a browser, it was a bold reimagining of how the internet could feel. It was sleek, focused, and built for creativity. But now, the browser that once felt like the future is quietly fading away.
For many people, Arc Browser felt like the first browser actually made for users and not just ad revenue. So why is it suddenly being discontinued?

Arc is dead, Dia is the future
You've probably heard it by now: Arc isn’t going to be here forever, no matter what The Browser Company says. And those promised security updates? Let’s be honest: why would they still fund that three years from now if they don’t want people using Arc?
What is Dia, and what does this mean for Arc?
Dia is being built as an AI-powered browser that learns your habits, automates tasks, and makes browsing “smarter.” That sounds exciting coming from a company as innovative as The Browser Company. But there is a major catch.
Dia is not designed for the same people as Arc
Arc was for power users, creatives, and productivity lovers. It gave us control, flexibility, and a workflow that felt genuinely personal. You could drag things, split tabs, take visual notes, and customize your own little internet. It brought us a new way of browsing the web.
Feature | Arc Browser | Dia Browser |
Sidebar | ✅ Yes — central to navigation | ❌ Not available |
Spaces | ✅ Yes — for grouping tabs | ❌ Not available |
Boosts | ✅ Yes — customize websites visually | ❌ Not available |
Easels & Notes | ✅ Built-in creative tools | ❌ Not yet announced |
Tab organization | ✅ Visual and flexible | ❌ Traditional tab bar |
Target user | Designers, creatives, power users | General audience |
AI features | ❌ None/limited | ✅ Central to product vision |
Development status | ❌ Frozen (no new features) | ✅ Actively developed |
For now, Dia doesn’t have what makes Arc beloved by its core users
It’s more like a traditional browser with a few tweaks. There’s no Sidebar, no Spaces, no Boosts, and no built-in way to organize your chaos the way Arc did.
Maybe those features will come later. But right now, Dia feels like a different product for a different audience, and that’s probably exactly what it’s meant to be... Dia might be great for some people, but not if you were an Arc fan.
Why did Arc lose momentum?
It wasn’t because people stopped loving Arc. In fact, a lot of people still do.
But Arc had one big problem: money.
Most browsers (like Safari, Firefox, and Edge) make their income from search engine deals and other preinstalled software. Arc didn’t have any of that. It let you choose your search engine and let you decide everything. Great for UX, but not great for revenue.
That meant The Browser Company had to rely on investor funding. And when that well runs dry, priorities change.
Arc didn’t fail because it was bad. It just didn’t fit the business model most browsers rely on. And Dia, with its AI angle, is likely a pivot toward something more mainstream and fundable.
For Arc users, this feels like a breakup
If you’ve been using Arc, it’s hard not to feel a little let down.
It wasn’t just about how the Arc Browser looked. It was about how it made you work, smoother, more focused, more inspired. It felt like someone got you.
Arc development is frozen, but not officially discontinued
Dia, the “replacement,” feels more like a completely new direction than an evolution. You’re not crazy if you feel like the soul of Arc is being left behind. But who knows, maybe future Dia updates will "steal" some of the parts that makes Arc so beloved by the design community.
What should Arc users do now?
If you’re still using Arc, it’s okay to keep going for now.
But here’s what I’d recommend:
Back up your data (just in case)
Watch Dia and see if it fits your needs
Try alternatives like Zen, Vivaldi, or Firefox
There’s still no browser quite like Arc. But if it’s not getting new features, it might be time to move on.
Arc gave us something special - now it’s slipping away
Arc reminded us that browsers don’t have to be boring. It gave us a glimpse of what the internet could feel like. But in the world of tech, even the most loved products can fall if they don’t find a way to survive financially. Dia might carry the torch forward, or leave creative users behind.
Either way, the story of Arc is a good reminder: great design gets attention, but it doesn’t always pay the bills.
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