See also: How to turn off GPU hardware acceleration in Google Chrome Step 1: Click the Chrome Menu in the top right hand corner of the Google Chrome browser and select “Settings”. Step 2: Scroll down and click “Show Advanced Settings”. Then scroll down until you see the “Web Content” heading, as shown above. Once you’ve found the Web Content menu, click “Customize fonts…” Step 3: Change your font! The preview on the right hand side of each font selection will update to reflect your newly chosen font. Take note: if your default encoding doesn’t match the one needed by a website, the text may not display properly – so don’t go too overboard with “exotic” fonts. Step 4: Click done and your settings will be saved. See also: Which is the best browser for Windows?
The font I’ve chosen isn’t displaying properly. What can I do?
If you do notice squares appearing in web pages where there should be text, one option is to substitute the web pages encoding – it’s a lot easier than it sounds, don’t worry! Step 1: Click the Google Chrome options menu in the top right hand corner of the browser. Step 2: Select “More Tools” then select “Encoding”. From here you can do one of two things, with the first being to manually select a different encoding, which can be confusing if you don’t understand encoding in general. The second option, which most people should do, is select “Auto-detect”. If you select Auto-detect, Google Chrome will analyse the content on the page and recommend the best encoding choice. Once selected, your web page should reload with text instead of squares. Make sure that once you’re done viewing that web page, you change your encoding back to Unicode as Auto-detect can slow down your browsing experience. See also: Best Chromebooks of 2015 Lewis Painter is a Senior Staff Writer at Tech Advisor. Our resident Apple expert, Lewis covers everything from iPhone to AirPods, plus a range of smartphones, tablets, laptops and gaming hardware. You’ll also find him on the Tech Advisor YouTube channel.