Every few months, the same story resurfaces. YouTube changes something behind the scenes; Brave users suddenly start seeing ads again; social media fills with complaints; and Brave developers scramble to respond. A few days or weeks later, things settle down until the cycle repeats.
We’ve been covering this cat-and-mouse game for years, and one thing has become increasingly clear: neither side is willing to blink. This week, however, the conversation feels a little different.
Over the last few days, a massive wave of complaints has flooded Reddit and X, with die-hard Brave users seeing pre-roll and mid-roll ads on YouTube. Whether you’re on desktop, Android, or iOS, the unskippable annoyance of YouTube ads is bleeding through Brave’s legendary shields. Brave support has acknowledged the reports and recommends manually updating the browser’s content filtering lists or clearing the cache before reloading YouTube tabs. Unfortunately, several affected users say those fixes haven’t worked for them.
If you’ve followed this space for long enough, none of this is exactly surprising.
Google has been tightening the screws on ad blockers for years. It famously pushed browsers toward Manifest V3 after dropping support for Manifest V2, a move that weakened traditional extensions like uBlock Origin. Brave, however, has repeatedly found ways around Google’s restrictions. In fact, they never miss a chance to brag about offering a free, ad-free YouTube experience right when Google announces another price hike. It’s almost a sport for them—tormenting YouTube’s engineers and showing off their superior blocking prowess.
That confidence is precisely why Google keeps fighting back.
Over the past year alone, we’ve seen YouTube playback errors spread from Brave Browser to ReVanced users, YouTube background play break, then eventually be fixed, and even Brave quietly remove its free offline YouTube playlist download feature on iOS after drawing attention from Google. Brave has also repeatedly addressed bugs affecting YouTube background playback on both desktop and mobile while continuing to add custom tools to disable YouTube Shorts natively within the browser, and it’s clear why Google views Brave as public enemy number one.
Viewed individually, each incident looks like a temporary bug. Viewed together, though, a pattern starts to emerge.
The intervals between YouTube disruptions appear to be getting shorter, forcing Brave engineers to release fixes more frequently than before. That doesn’t necessarily mean Google is winning, but it does suggest YouTube’s anti-ad-blocking systems are becoming increasingly sophisticated.
Still, declaring victory for Google would be premature. History suggests this battle rarely has a permanent winner. Google updates YouTube. Brave adapts. ReVanced follows. Google changes something else. The cycle repeats.
That’s exactly why I don’t think Brave is losing, at least not yet. Instead, I think we’re watching a long-running arms race become even more intense. Google has enormous financial incentives to protect YouTube Premium and advertising revenue, while Brave has built much of its reputation around giving users more control over their browsing experience, including blocking ads that other browsers struggle to stop.
Whether YouTube eventually finds a way to permanently shut Brave out remains anyone’s guess. For now, though, the recent wave of complaints suggests Google may finally be closing the gap, but Brave certainly isn’t ready to surrender.
The post Is Brave finally losing the battle against YouTube ads? appeared first on PiunikaWeb.