Well, in terms of design, they’re almost identical. A lot of the old-school design elements of the original Edge browser are gone, replaced with rounder edges and cleaner interfaces. One noticeable difference, though, is in the default search engine and homepage. Edge defaults to Microsoft’s Bing, naturally, while Google defaults to Google’s search engine. Fortunately, either can be switched at will and is only a temporary nuisance. Edge and Chrome are both built on the Chromium open-source browser using the Blink rendering engine, and, as such, they’re more similar than they are different. These are both very fast browsers. Granted, Chrome narrowly beats Edge in the Kraken and Jetstream benchmarks, but it’s not enough to recognize in day-to-day use. Microsoft Edge does have one significant performance advantage over Chrome: Memory usage. Edge used 665MB of RAM with six pages loaded while Chrome used 1.4GB. If you’re someone who’s bothered by how much of a memory-hog Chrome has become, Microsoft Edge is the clear winner in this regard. Edge has more privacy settings than Chrome, and it’s much easier to track them down. Meanwhile, Chrome is limited to blocking third-party cookies. I feel more exposed by using Google Chrome, but, you can call it a habit, or a prejudice for Internet Explorer, I prefer Google Chrome instead of Microsoft Edge. At the end of the day, it's up to you. I would suggest you to give it a try and then you will have more data and experience to compare them.