We all want our internet experience to be fast, right? Few things about accessing online resources are as frustrating as when that access results in slow page loading, freezing, or stuttering. Speed. We like speed.

When it comes to Chrome, Google understands that we want that speed to be achieved, and they’ve tweaked Chrome on Android to focus more on speed than ever. In a post on Chrome BlogGoogle has shared a minor update to Chrome for Android that should allow it to run certain tests 30% faster on high-end devices.

Specifically, we’re talking about Apple’s Speedometer 2.1 test, which Google often targets to convince Mac and iPhone users around the world that Chrome is faster (or as fast) as Safari. They also find the use of Chrome optimization on Android to run Speedometer, which can’t be a bad thing.

Regarding the change they made that allows this benchmark to run 30% faster on high-end Android devices, Google states that “they are now targeting a version of Chrome that uses compiler flags tuned for speed rather than binary size” . I’m not a web developer so my answer to this is gosh dude. All things must be set to speed.

If you have a high-end Android device – and we don’t know the criteria behind this designation – enjoy a faster Chrome.

Link to google play: chrome