In the graphical browser category, I have tried Qutebrowser and it is neat. However, Firefox remains as my primary web browser. I use the Vimium plugin with Firefox. It provides Vim-like key bindings for many commonly used browsing tasks.

My most favourite commands in Vimum are 'f' and 'F'. The 'f' or 'F' command creates key combinations for all the links found in the page. It highlights the key combinations in little yellow boxes above every link. We can then type the lowercase key combination for a link to open that link. While 'f' opens the link in the current tab, 'F' opens it in a new tab. Alternatively, we can type uppercase key combinations to reverse the behaviour of 'f' and 'F', i.e., 'f' with upper case key combination opens the link in a new tab and 'F' with upper case key combination opens it in the current tab.

My other favourite commands, in no particular order, are: 'J' (go one tab left), 'K' (go one tab right), 'H' (go back in history), 'L' (go forward in history), 't' (create new tab), 'T' (search through open tabs), 'x' (close tab), and 'r' (reload page).

Also, there are the 'h', 'j', 'k', and 'l' commands to scroll left, down, up, and right, respectively.

Vimium for Firefox: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/vimium-ff/

Vimium for Chrome: https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/vimium/dbepggeogba...

Ever since I started using vimium, it's become a need for me. It's the reason I don't use safari despite its better performance on a macbook.

Weirdly enough, none of the people I've tried to convince to use it has stuck with it - all very tech literate people.

There's Vimari [1] which works well enough.

[1] https://github.com/televator-apps/vimari