Microsoft shows Chrome pinned on the taskbar in a Windows 11 “Home of Gaming” ad, while it tells you to never use Google’s browser

Peer Networks UK Windows Latest Microsoft shows Chrome pinned on the taskbar in a Windows 11 “Home of Gaming” ad, while it tells you to never use Google’s browser

Microsoft has a new ad that says Windows 11 is the home of gaming in an attempt to encourage users, including those who are still stuck on Windows 10, to give this five-year-old operating system a try. But the new ad has a funny detail where the taskbar shows Google Chrome pinned.

As first spotted by Windows Latest, Microsoft uploaded a short ad titled “Windows 11: The Home of Gaming” on December 23, two days before Christmas. In the ad, Microsoft says Windows 11 is meant for gaming and then shows off some of the gaming features, including the Xbox app.

The ad, which is on YouTube, was supposed to encourage gamers to buy a Windows PC during the holiday season because it offers the best gaming experience.

Windows 11 ad features Google Chrome

However, Windows Latest noticed that the Windows 11 ad forgets to hide Chrome, and that’s the best part.

Windows 11 ad features Google Chrome

I don’t think it’s intentional at all, as no Microsoft ad in the past has promoted Google Chrome directly or indirectly. It also stands out because Microsoft has spent years pushing Edge and Bing in Windows. Either the ad team didn’t care, or they wanted it to look like a real, normal setup, because who hasn’t used Google Chrome at some point in life?

In fact, there’s a famous meme that says Microsoft Edge is used only to download Google Chrome. And to some, it’s true, as even Microsoft admits it by showing full-fledged Edge banners when you try to search Chrome or Google on Bing.com.

Microsoft Bing ad comparing Chrome and Edge

Bing is the default search engine and the only place Microsoft can control to show anti-Chrome nudges.

Microsoft Bing ad for Edge against Chrome

If you move ahead with your Google Chrome download, Edge will still nudge you and recommend using Edge instead, saying that it’s built on the same technology as Google’s.

Given these practices, it makes no sense for Microsoft to show Chrome as pinned. I watched several other ads released by the company recently, and they do not feature Chrome on the taskbar.

In the comments section, some users have also pointed out that even Microsoft uses Google Chrome, while others are unhappy with Windows 11’s gaming performance.

In the ad, Microsoft says, “Experience gaming like never before on Windows 11,” but this is far from the truth, as Windows continues to be a mess for gaming.

Windows 11 still uses resources in the background when it’s not supposed to, often disrupts the experience with notifications or pop-ups, and independent benchmarks have shown that SteamOS can run games better if compatible.

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