The amount of parameters you have to add to a Chromium browser, on Linux, to make it actually use hardware accelerated video decode is retarded.
How have they STILL not made this a default feature?

My only comfort is that from things I'm reading, Firefox isn't doing that much better either.

This works for me on latest Vivaldi stable.

--ignore-gpu-blocklist
--enable-gpu-rasterization
--enable-zero-copy
--enable-native-gpu-memory-buffers
--enable-accelerated-video-decode
--enable-features=VaapiVideoDecoder
--disable-gpu-driver-bug-workarounds
--disable-features=UseChromeOSDirectVideoDecoder

@alyx >actually use hardware accelerated video decode
Most hardware accelerated video decoding is handled by proprietary software, so what are you expecting?

>latest Vivaldi stable.
Why do you use a proprietary browser?
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@Suiseiseki
Let me guess, Firefox? No thanks. I'd rather use a browser that actually makes my life easier.

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@alyx netsurf, w3m, lynx, emacs web viewer, wget and rendering the HTML in your head - the possibilities are endless.

It's quite sad that you surrender your freedom for a very small amount of convenience.
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