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Comparison SuperchargePerformance

FasterWeb vs SuperchargePerformance: Which Is BEST? (2026)

FasterWeb preloads links but nothing for RAM or ads, so you still need 2 more extensions. How it stacks up against one tool that covers all three, tested 2026.

3 min read Verified Chrome 146

Key takeaways

  • FasterWeb bets on speculative preloading: fetching the next page before you click it.
  • Blocking saves time on every single page load. Preloading only helps when you actually click the predicted link.
  • SuperchargePerformance includes preloading too, but also strips the ads and trackers slowing the current page down.

Preloading and blocking are two different answers to the same question: why does browsing feel slow? FasterWeb bets on preloading — fetching pages before you click them. SuperchargePerformance bets that removing the bloat before it loads is more effective than getting a head start on downloading it. Both are valid strategies; they just solve different parts of the problem.

How Each Approach Works

FasterWeb uses speculative preloading: it fetches destination URLs in the background when you hover over or approach a link. On fast connections, this reduces the time between clicking a link and seeing the next page.

SuperchargePerformance uses two complementary strategies:

  1. Subtraction: declarativeNetRequest blocking removes ads, trackers, and heavy scripts before they load, directly reducing page weight and parse time
  2. Preloading: Same-site and cross-site link preloading (L1 and L2) speeds up navigation for likely next clicks

Feature Comparison

FeatureSuperchargePerformanceFasterWeb
Link preloadingYes (same-site L1, all links L2)Yes (primary feature)
Ad blockingYes (declarativeNetRequest)No
Tracker blockingYesNo
Script blockingYesNo
Tab suspensionYesNo
RAM savings dashboardYesNo
Cookie banner removalYes (Intelligent Persistent Blocking)No
MV3 nativeYesNot confirmed in our research
CostFree core, optional PRONot confirmed in our research

Preloading Has Tradeoffs

Speculative preloading is most effective when:

  • You have a fast, unmetered connection
  • You actually click the preloaded link (wasted bandwidth if you don’t)
  • The destination page is not already cached

Preloading also has a privacy consideration: fetching a link causes the browser to make network requests to third-party domains on the destination page, which can trigger analytics pixels even if you never complete the navigation. SuperchargePerformance’s built-in blocking prevents these requests from reaching trackers regardless of preloading behavior.

Blocking vs. Preloading as a Performance Strategy

Blocking cuts page weight before anything loads. A page with 30 ad and tracker requests gets lighter the moment the rules apply — consistent savings every time, no speculation required.

Preloading moves the wait earlier. The page still downloads the same content; you just started downloading it before you clicked. Preloading an ad-heavy page faster doesn’t make it feel lighter — you still get the ads, you just got them slightly earlier.

For most browsing sessions, blocking delivers more consistent speed improvements than preloading alone. Preloading is most valuable on fast, clean pages where you have a predictable next click.

Who Should Choose What

Choose FasterWeb if your primary goal is faster navigation on specific sites and you already have separate tools for ad blocking and memory management.

Choose SuperchargePerformance if you want a single extension that handles preloading alongside ad blocking, tab suspension, and memory management without running multiple background tools.

Bottom Line

FasterWeb does one thing: cut navigation latency through preloading. That’s a real benefit, but it’s narrow. SuperchargePerformance handles page weight, memory from inactive tabs, and navigation latency together. If you’re already running a separate ad blocker and tab suspender, FasterWeb fills a gap. If you’re not, it doesn’t make sense to add preloading while leaving the bigger performance problems unaddressed.

For related comparisons, see SuperchargePerformance vs Auto Tab Discard and SuperchargePerformance vs AdGuard.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does FasterWeb actually do?
FasterWeb focuses on link preloading — fetching destination URLs in the background before you click. This can reduce perceived navigation latency on fast connections.
Can I use FasterWeb and SuperchargePerformance together?
You can, but both preload links, so you would have redundant preloading. Running two extensions for the same function adds unnecessary background overhead. SuperchargePerformance includes preloading as one of its features, so a separate preloading extension is not needed.
Does FasterWeb block ads?
No. FasterWeb focuses on preloading. It has no ad blocking, tab suspension, or memory management features.
Is preloading or ad blocking faster?
They work differently. Preloading fetches the next page before you click. Ad blocking reduces the weight of the current page by removing ads and trackers before they load. Ad blocking produces consistent savings on every page. Preloading only helps if you actually click the preloaded link.

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