Dark Reader is feature-rich and can be configured in many ways throughout the UI. The extension includes a good dozen color themes to choose from. Just restart Firefox or reload open tabs to have the theme applied to them as well. Based on its analysis, Dark Reader will generate a dark mode that aims to reduce the eyestrain of the user. The extension applies a dark theme to all sites you visit by default but only to sites that you load after you have installed the extension. Dark Reader is an open-source MIT-licensed browser extension that is designed to analyze web pages. Another dream I have, is webpages automatically (without signing on) offering dark theme options. Dark Reader analyzes web pages and aims to reduce the eyestrain while you browse the web. FF dark mode also needs lots of improvements. ShadowFox is the final "strawberry on top" for dark themes.Īs you, I will love new improvements in Stylus/Stylish, as well as updates and new global dark theme styles too. It works fine at least for 90% of the webpages.
After quick & few tweaks, I surf the web without having the need to change or touch nothing.Īnd yes, "Midnight Surfing Global" is far from perfect, also needs tons of updates, but in my opinion it is still better than any add-on. I can change colors, whitelist pages etc. Night Eye enables dark mode on pretty much all websites - Facebook, Google, Quora, Github, Stackoverflow, Wikipedia and much more. But in my case, I don't care, I enjoy tweaking CSS styles. Night Eye enables night mode on any website using new algorithm that analyses and converts all colours instead of simply inverting them. It demands a little know-how + time (10 minutes) in order to make things working fine. I prefer to use Stylus (open code) or Stylish.
However, in my personal opinion darker add-ons negatively affect FF performance (specially speed/rendering). I recognize the convenience of choices and updates that add-ons offer.
I believe I tested most of the FF darker add-ons.