Open Opera today and you might notice the browser behaving less like a passive window and more like a small, impatient colleague — the kind that leans over your shoulder and offers a one-sentence summary of the article you’ve been doom-scrolling for twenty minutes. That’s by design. Opera has quietly swapped the brains behind its in-browser assistant for Google’s Gemini models, folding the latest generation of AI into Opera One, Opera GX and its experimental Neon browser so the sidebar that used to be a convenience tool now acts like a context-aware workbench. The change is free for users (Opera says the rollout reaches more than 80 million people) and it’s meant to keep you inside the browser instead of shuttling tabs into another app.
If you’ve tried browser sidebars before, imagine one that actually reads the room. The new Opera AI lives in a panel that can access the content of the page you’re on, look across groups of tabs you’ve opened for the same project, and even pull context from videos and files you drop into it. Ask it to summarize a 3,000-word support doc and it won’t return stock boilerplate — it’ll condense the actionable steps and point to the exact paragraphs you should read. Open several product pages and you can compare specs and pros and cons without making you copy-paste links into a separate chat window. That contextual angle is the selling point: instead of a generic chatbot that knows nothing about what you’re doing, this one claims to know enough to be genuinely helpful.

Under the hood, the upgrade is more than a swap of API keys. Opera says it rebuilt the assistant using architectural work from its Neon experiment and that the new engine yields faster responses — the company puts the number at roughly 20 percent quicker — and adds support for voice input and output, plus multi-file analysis, including images and video. In practice, that means you can speak a question, have the AI parse a PDF you dragged into the panel, and then hear the answer read back without breaking your flow. For power users — journalists, students, or anyone juggling research — the pitch is obvious: fewer context switches and less alt-tab anxiety.
All of this naturally invites the privacy question. A sidebar that reads your tabs can sound invasive, and Opera is trying to head off the easy headlines by putting granular controls in front of users: you choose which tabs or types of content the AI can see, rather than accepting a brute-force, always-on model. Opera’s take is pragmatic — let the assistant read project tabs but block access to bank or medical pages — and the company says those toggles are central to the design. That approach mirrors the broader browser conversation about how much computational intimacy users want from AI helpers and whether that intimacy should be opt-in at a very specific level.
This isn’t just about making Opera stickier; it’s a strategic play that benefits both companies. For Google, planting Gemini inside a third-party browser extends the model’s reach beyond Chrome and Android and gives Gemini more varied real-world exposure — a field test across millions of sessions. For Opera, the integration is a clear differentiator: the company has long positioned itself as an innovator with built-in niceties (VPN, ad blocking, gamer features in GX) and now it’s betting that a free, capable AI layer will convince people that Opera is more than a niche alternative. The result is an unusual alignment: a smaller browser leveraging a heavyweight AI supplier to punch above its market share.
There are tradeoffs to watch. Contextual answers can be liberating when they surface the precise nugget you need, but they can also hide the provenance of claims or shortcut the habit of reading original sources. Opera’s model will matter here: how often does the AI link back to the exact line in the article it paraphrased? How transparent is the tool about uncertainty? Those aren’t hypothetical; they’re the kinds of UX choices that determine whether people trust the sidebar for decisions that matter. Early coverage notes the practical niceties — file parsing, voice I/O, tab comparisons — but independent testing will be necessary to validate the quality and faithfulness of answers over time.
For everyday browsing, the change is subtler than a flashy new toolbar. Most users will register it in tiny accelerations: a shopping decision resolved faster because the AI compared product pages for you, an email rewritten in place beside your webmail, or a long forum thread condensed to a bullet list before you commit to a reply. Those moments compound into a different relationship with the web: the browser becomes an interpretive layer that edits and summarizes instead of just fetching. That shift is why companies from Microsoft to The Browser Company are chasing similar territory — the browser is one of the last interfaces that still mediates most people’s access to information, and AI makes it a vector for new kinds of interaction.
If you’re curious to try it, Opera’s rollout is already underway: the Gemini-powered features are appearing in Opera One and GX (and continue to be explored in Neon), and Opera is pitching the functionality as free rather than gated behind a subscription. But as with any service that brings a powerful model closer to the parts of your life where sensitive data lives, the most important choices will be the ones you make in the settings. Toggle what you want the AI to see, poke under the hood to understand whether it links back to sources, and treat the sidebar like an assistant whose competence you should verify rather than a substitute for your own judgment.
Opera’s experiment will be one to watch because it’s testing an idea that could remake how we think about browsers: not just software for rendering pages, but a small, active intelligence that sits between you and the web. Whether that intelligence becomes a trusted helper or an overhelpful intruder depends less on the novelty of models like Gemini and more on how transparently those models behave inside the everyday tools we already use.
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