Opera releases new ‘AI’ browser and thinks you will pay $20/mo for it
Perplexity simply opened up its Comet browser to customers past its paid subscription service, albeit with a number of paywalled options. However each longstanding browser (with one notable exception) appears to be cramming “AI” into itself, and Opera by no means likes to be left behind. The corporate’s new Neon “AI” browser is now out there totally free. No, wait, that’s unsuitable. It’s out there for $19.90/month. What?
Sure, Opera appears to suppose its customers will shell out simply shy of twenty bones a month to let an agentic AI program management their searching. Some customers are getting a beneficiant provide to pay $59.90 for 9 months of entry to the brand new construct for Home windows and Mac, after which it’ll price $19.90 per 30 days. That is an early adopter bundle for “Founder” entry, and presumably Opera will open up entry extra broadly later (like Perplexity has). The pricing was shared on Twitter/X and noticed by BleepingComputer.
Opera Neon claims it might probably set up your tabs with AI, carry out duties in your behalf on a “cloud hosted digital laptop,” generate textual content, photographs, and video, and provide chatbots that invade your tabs through OpenAI’s ChatGPT or Google’s Gemini. A variety of that stuff isn’t free, even when Opera is working as a intermediary to offer these providers. Paying further additionally will get you a “direct line” to the builders for discussions and have requests and presumably some invite codes.
The tab administration and digital laptop stuff are the one issues you may’t accomplish your self (presumably totally free) with present instruments, AI, and in any other case. So even when I had been a fan of Opera—I’m not, please cease asking me to put in writing about your blinged-out gaming browser—I don’t suppose I’d be enticed sufficient to pony up for this. In truth, seeing Opera hop into the AI brawl solely makes me admire my browser bestie Vivaldi all of the extra. The small crew’s Chromium-based browser is blessedly, refreshingly freed from “AI,” as its builders have made it clear that they suppose customers wish to work together with these instruments on the net and on their phrases.
“We don’t see AI as one thing that our customers are asking for,” stated Vivaldi’s govt Stephenson von Tetzchner on the launch of Vivaldi model 7. “I feel lots of people are reacting to force-fed AI.” So, for those who’re up for some force-feeding, join the Opera Neon waitlist right here.

