ChatGPT Atlas adds Arc-style vertical tabs in latest update – The Tech Buzz

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ChatGPT Atlas adds Arc-style vertical tabs in latest update
OpenAI's AI browser gets Arc-inspired sidebar tabs plus Google search integration
PUBLISHED: Thu, Nov 20, 2025, 3:47 PM UTC | UPDATED: Fri, Nov 21, 2025, 1:07 PM UTC
3 mins read
OpenAI adds Arc-style vertical tabs to ChatGPT Atlas browser with resizable sidebar and tab reordering
Users can now set Google as default search engine, acknowledging traditional search still matters
Update includes extension importing, iCloud passkeys, and improved downloads interface
Positions Atlas against Perplexity's Comet and Google's Chrome AI extensions in AI browsing race
OpenAI just pushed a major update to ChatGPT Atlas that brings Arc browser-style vertical tabs to its AI-powered browsing experience. The update also lets users set Google as their default search engine, signaling a more traditional approach to web search alongside ChatGPT's AI-generated summaries. It's the kind of incremental improvement that shows how AI companies are learning from established browser design patterns while building their own search experiences.
OpenAI just shipped what might be the most user-friendly update to ChatGPT Atlas yet. The AI-powered browser now sports vertical tabs in a left sidebar that looks strikingly similar to the beloved Arc browser – and honestly, it's about time someone borrowed from Arc's playbook.
The implementation feels familiar to anyone who's used Arc. You can resize the sidebar, drag tabs around to reorder them, and access everything through a clean left-hand interface instead of the traditional top bar. To enable it, you simply right-click in the address bar, hover over "Tab Style," and select "Vertical Tabs." It's not quite as polished as Arc's version – the address bar still lives at the top – but it's a solid start.
What's more interesting is the philosophical shift happening here. OpenAI also added the ability to set Google as your default search engine, which feels like an admission that sometimes people just want to Google things the old-fashioned way. As The Verge previously noted, using Atlas can sometimes "feel like Googling with extra steps."
The broader update package shows OpenAI is serious about making Atlas a daily driver. New users can now import extensions from their existing browsers during setup, though existing users will have to wait for this feature. There's also support for iCloud keychain passkeys, which should make the Mac-first browser feel more native to Apple's ecosystem.
Power users get some nice touches too. You can now select multiple tabs at once using Shift+click, and there's a new Control+Tab setting to cycle through recently used tabs instead of just going left to right. The downloads interface got a refresh as well, though OpenAI hasn't detailed what specifically changed there.
Atlas launched on macOS just last month, but it's already feeling the competitive pressure. Perplexity's Comet browser is making waves, and Google keeps enhancing Chrome with Gemini AI features. The AI browsing space is heating up fast, with each company trying to nail the balance between AI assistance and traditional web browsing.
What's striking is how OpenAI is embracing conventional browser wisdom instead of trying to reinvent everything. The vertical tabs aren't revolutionary – they're just good design borrowed from Arc. The Google search integration acknowledges that AI summaries don't always replace the need for traditional search results.
Atlas still presents around 10 AI-curated sources for most queries, with a Google Search link tucked in the top-right corner as a backup. It's a hedge that suggests even OpenAI knows ChatGPT doesn't have all the answers, especially for current events or highly specific queries.
The timing feels strategic. As more people experiment with AI-powered browsing, the companies that nail the fundamentals – good tab management, familiar shortcuts, reliable search fallbacks – will likely win out over those pushing pure AI novelty.
The ChatGPT Atlas update signals a maturing approach to AI-powered browsing. By borrowing Arc's best interface ideas and acknowledging Google's continued relevance, OpenAI is building a browser that feels less like an AI experiment and more like a tool people might actually use daily. As the AI browsing wars intensify with Perplexity, Google, and others, the winners will likely be those who blend AI intelligence with proven user experience patterns – exactly what this Atlas update delivers.
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