Firefox v67 will ship with WebRender Rendering Engine
Firefox is planning to launch a new stable version of the v67 version around the early hours of tomorrow morning, and the Mozilla will gradually promote WebRender from this version. WebRender is a new component of the Mozilla based on Rust, designed to improve the problem of stuck in web browsing.
According to Mozilla, the new rendering engine itself is not used to speed up page loading, but to improve the smoothness of rendering during page loading. With the new rendering engine, Firefox is expected to smoothly render web pages with a 60 FPS update rate no matter how big the display is.
Compared with Google Chrome, Google Chrome update frequency is only 15 FPS, so users will find that the web rendering experience is super good when they put on the Firefox browser. Therefore, some slower web pages will be reduced in the gradual loading, and the visual experience will be significantly better when the user uses them.
According to Mozilla, the new rendering engine currently only supports the Windows 10 platform, and the computer must be equipped with NVIDIA graphics cards to work. This means that other platforms and users using AMD GPUs will not be able to experience it for a while, and of course, Firefox is still testing the new rendering engine publicly. Perhaps after the completion of the follow-up test, Firefox will extend the support to more platforms, but currently, Firefox does not explain whether it will support expansion.