Google may soon introduce a search bar design in Chrome's New Tab page, which is said to be called "Realbox Next." This looks a lot similar to AI input fields than a simple bar. However, this redesign is not on by default as it's being silently tested.
Google is constantly working on improving its core apps, including Chrome. The browser already has Gemini support and AI Mode, making searches more contextual. It is also capable of reading any webpage like a podcast. The latest development suggests that we might soon bid goodbye to the traditional search bar. The company is reportedly working on redesigning Chrome's 'New Tab' page's search box.
The Chrome search box redesign is reportedly called "Realbox Next," with "Tall and "Compact" layout options to pick. These look a lot similar to AI input fields than a simple search bar. The Tall version has a two-row design that resembles a chat or compose box. This means it should be able to handle longer questions and display contextual suggestions. The other one is compact, as the name suggests.
Both layouts have "Ask Google" at the top. This Chrome redesign also reportedly offers suggestions within the search area like "Make a Comparison," "Teach me a new skill," "Make a plan," and "Research a topic."
The Tall box design suggests that Google wants to turn the New Tab Page into more than just a shortcut for quick searches. It's projecting the new layout as a starting point for any research, learning, or making plans. It could handle more than basic searches.
However, Windowsreport notes that this redesign is under silent testing behind a flag, "NTP Realbox Next," and is not on by default. The flag's description notes, "it enables the Realbox Next Experience," and offers options to show either the new Tall or Compact design.
Besides this, Chrome is also reportedly testing Lens video citations and a "Create tab group" option in the menu. The browser's Reading Mode will get four new color themes for a more comfortable reading experience.