Opera GX just rolled out something that feels very on-brand for the “chronically online” crowd: a dedicated Playground inside the browser that lets you game the internet as much as you game on it. It is a bundle of opt-in, slightly unhinged features like a panic button, a fake browsing history generator, and a virtual patch of grass to “touch” without leaving your chair.
If you have not followed Opera GX closely, this is Opera’s gaming-first browser built on Chromium, known for letting you cap CPU, RAM, and network usage so your tabs do not tank your frame rates mid-match. It already leans into gamer culture with aggressive theming, sound effects, and integrations like Twitch and GX Corner, where you get deals and gaming news directly in the browser. Playground does not mess with those performance-focused tools; instead, it tucks a new layer of chaotic fun and privacy tricks into one place you can opt into or totally ignore.
The idea behind Playground is simple: GX has always experimented with features that start as jokes but actually map to real behavior, like having too many tabs open at work or not wanting anyone to see what you were googling at 3 am. So Opera created a centralized space where these “mischief” tools live, without cluttering the core browser experience or confusing people who just want fast performance and resource controls. Product director Maciej Kocemba basically frames Playground as a sandbox for ideas that solve the problems we meme about as much as the ones we complain about.

At the center of it all is Grass Touching Corner, maybe the most internet-poisoned feature name you could ship in 2026. It is literally a small, interactive patch of digital grass that sits in the bottom-right corner of your GX window, which you can poke, click, and “touch” like a low-key idle game. Whenever someone in chat tells you to go outside and touch grass, you can roll your eyes, tap the corner of your screen, and technically comply without moving from your desk.
That small visual joke does a couple of things at once. It acknowledges how gaming culture has turned “go touch grass” into a shorthand for “log off,” while also admitting most of us have no intention of actually doing that. It gives players a tiny moment of fidget-style interaction during queues, loading screens, or between rounds, turning a meme into a built-in micro distraction.
Then there is Panic Button, which feels like the spiritual successor to the classic “boss key” from old PC games, updated for 2026 browsing habits. With one key press, GX instantly hides your current tabs, pauses content, mutes audio, and flips you over to a pre-chosen “safe” site like Wikipedia or YouTube. It is meant for those “someone just walked into the room” moments when you do not want to be alt-tabbing through a chaotic stack of windows, hoping the wrong tab doesn’t pop up.
Opera clearly knows its audience here. For students, that safe page might be a doc or study resource; for office workers, maybe a dashboard or report; for streamers, something neutral to avoid flashing something questionable on a live feed. But GX also bakes in a bit of chaos: Opera warns that the “safe tabs” are not entirely angelic and that Panic Button might occasionally drop you into something just as questionable, keeping the feature in line with the brand’s trollish humor.
If Panic Button is about the present, Fake My History is about your legacy. The feature, which Opera GX has been building on since it first introduced the idea back in 2023, offers to quietly rewrite your browsing history after a certain period of inactivity. The pitch: instead of leaving behind a trail of bizarre late-night searches, NSFW detours, and deep conspiracy rabbit holes, GX replaces your past with wholesome activities like study sessions, volunteering, tutorials, and the occasional cat video.

Under the hood, Fake My History kicks in after 14 days of browsing inactivity, at which point the browser assumes you have either abandoned GX, switched to another browser, or metaphorically “fallen into a bottomless pit.” When that happens, it wipes your real history and swaps in a curated fake one that makes you look suspiciously productive and socially responsible. You trigger it from the History page via a very on-brand “Redeem my soul” button, and there is even a “Pretend I’m already dead” option for those who want an immediate cleanup.
It is privacy, but with a wink. Instead of framing history deletion as a cold security step, Opera wraps it in a narrative about protecting your reputation “after death,” leaning into gamer humor about permadeath and rage-quitting life. For users, the practical upside is simple: if you walk away from a machine long enough, your browser will not be a time capsule of everything you looked up at your worst, weirdest hours.
All of these Playground tools are intentionally opt-in. Opera says the point is not to overload users with gimmicks, but to let people hand-pick the weird utilities that match their personality and tolerance for chaos. You can enable Grass Touching Corner but ignore Fake My History, or live on Panic Button and never touch the virtual lawn; nothing is forced on you out of the box.
That modular approach also keeps the “serious” core of GX intact. For a lot of gamers, the main draw of Opera GX is still GX Control and its resource limiters, which let you cap how much CPU, RAM, and bandwidth the browser consumes so your battle royale or MMO does not suddenly stutter because eight tabs decided to auto-play video at the same time. The browser’s aggressive customization options, from themes and wallpapers to GX Mods that totally reskin your setup, are still front and center for people who care more about performance and aesthetics than meme features.
Playground fits into a broader strategy Opera has been pushing: position GX not just as a skin-deep gaming browser, but as a culture-aware tool tuned to how gamers actually live online. That is why, alongside Playground, GX keeps integrating social and content platforms (like Twitch and YouTube), and offers things like built-in ad blocking, free VPN, and a curated GX Corner for deals and free games. It is a browser that wants to be the default hub for playing, watching, chatting, and now, covering your tracks and pretending to go outside.
From a UX perspective, Playground also solves a discoverability problem. Opera has launched quirky features before – like the original Fake My History rollout or various seasonal jokes – that could easily be forgotten if they were buried in menus. Putting them into a single named space makes it easier to market new experiments and train users to check one place whenever GX announces another internet joke-turned-feature.
For creators, streamers, and power users, some of these tools have very practical use cases despite their tongue-in-cheek packaging. Panic Button can be a real safety net for anyone who regularly shares their screen and can’t risk a DM, private dashboard, or random tab popping into view at the wrong time. Fake My History can be a softer alternative to nuking history entirely, especially on shared machines or setups people might leave behind when they upgrade. Even Grass Touching Corner might become a small ritual during long editing or grinding sessions, the kind of tiny break that keeps you from alt-tabbing into social media for “just a minute.”
What is notable is that Opera is giving these more experimental features a first-class home instead of treating them as one-off marketing stunts. By calling it Playground, the company is essentially promising this will be an ongoing channel for experiments that play with gamer humor, privacy norms, and how we present ourselves through our browsing. If any of those experiments really land, Opera can always promote them out of Playground into the core feature set later, while weaker ideas can fade out without bloating the main UI.
Right now, Playground is rolling out on Opera GX for Windows, Mac, and Linux, and you access it from within the browser settings once you update to the latest version. GX remains free to download, and Opera keeps pushing it as the alternative for gamers who feel traditional browsers either hog too many resources or are not playful enough in their design. For a generation that lives half its life in a browser tab, a space dedicated to touching virtual grass, faking your past, and bailing out of chaos in a single keystroke might feel a little too real – which is exactly the point.
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