The Chrome Web Store hosts extensions, not full browsers. Therefore, “Byte Browser” itself would not be listed there. However, in 2021, there might have been:
A search of the Chrome Web Store via historical records (archive.org, third-party trackers) shows no official “Byte Browser” extension in 2021.
The “20” in “20Chrome” likely stems from:
Thus, the intended search may have been:
“Byte Browser version 20 – Chrome Web Store 2021” – which would yield no results, as the Chrome Web Store does not distribute full browsers. byte browser 20chrome web store 2021
There is a darker, more cautionary side to this deep dive. Searching for obscure browsers or extensions from 2021 carries significant security risks.
If "Byte Browser" was a legitimate project that has since been abandoned, downloading it today is dangerous. Abandoned browser projects stop receiving security patches. The Chromium engine is updated constantly to patch "zero-day" exploits. Using a 2021 build of an obscure browser in 2024 is like driving a car that hasn't had a safety inspection in three years.
Furthermore, domain names and extension IDs often get scooped up by malware distributors. A user searching for "Byte Browser" in 2024 might stumble upon a malicious knock-off that looks like the 2021 version but is riddled with spyware. The Chrome Web Store hosts extensions, not full browsers
To make their antidetect browser work seamlessly with web services (like logging into Gmail or Facebook), Byte Browser needed Chrome-like extension support. Users were instructed to:
Sometime in early-to-mid 2021, Byte Browser did have a listing on the Chrome Web Store. It was not the full browser—it was a proxy management helper extension named something like "Byte Browser Sync" or "Byte Assistant."
To understand why you might be looking for this, we have to look at the state of the web in 2021. This was the peak of the "browser wars" cooling down and the "specialization wars" heating up. A search of the Chrome Web Store via
Users were tired of Chrome eating their RAM. They wanted browsers that did one thing well.
If "Byte Browser" existed in this space, it was likely marketed as a lightweight, "byte-sized" alternative to the bloat of mainstream Chrome. It likely promised speed and minimalism. The "20" in your search query—"20chrome"—is a telltale sign of a typo or a fragmented memory of a version number (perhaps version 2.0 or 2021).
The phrase “Byte Browser 20Chrome Web Store 2021” does not correspond to a legitimate, widely available product on the official Chrome Web Store in 2021. The most plausible interpretation is a user searching for a Chromium-based “Byte Browser” (likely version 20) and mistakenly assuming it could be found on the Chrome Web Store. No such listing existed. Users seeking similar functionality in 2021 would have used established multi-login browsers like Multilogin, GoLogin, or Indigo Browser, or Chrome extensions for profile management.