Let’s be honest, the modern web is… a mess. Pop-ups, autoplay videos, cookie banners, ads everywhere. In fact, sometimes it feels like actually reading something online is the hardest part. And that’s exactly where Textise comes in.
Think of it as a “strip everything away” button for the internet. Textise is a simple web tool that converts any webpage into a clean, text-only version, removing ads, images, scripts, and all the extra clutter. What you’re left with is just the content: no distractions, no loading bloat, no nonsense. It’s fast, lightweight, and honestly feels like going back to a simpler version of the web.
Why does it feel so refreshing?
Modern websites are built for engagement, not readability. That means heavy layouts, tracking scripts, and design choices that often get in the way of just consuming information. Tools like Textise flip that on its head by streamlining content into plain text, making it easier to read and more accessible. In fact, for long articles or research-heavy pieces, it can genuinely feel like a productivity boost: less scrolling, fewer distractions, and quicker load times.

You can even tweak how Textise looks and behaves, from fonts and text size to background colors and link styles. It’s a surprisingly flexible tool, letting you tailor the reading experience exactly the way you like it. Of course, you lose things along the way. Images, videos, interactive elements — all gone. But that’s also what makes it work. Textise isn’t trying to enhance the web; it’s trying to simplify it to the bare minimum. And weirdly enough, that’s exactly why it feels so useful in 2026.
So… who is this for? Well, pretty much anyone who reads a lot online. Whether it’s articles, blogs, or even cluttered news pages, Textise makes everything feel cleaner and easier to digest. It’s especially handy for people who just want to focus on content without distractions.
Same idea, very different vibe
If this all sounds familiar, that’s because most modern browsers already have a built-in Reader Mode, like the one in Safari or Chrome. These features clean up a webpage by removing ads, menus, and distractions, and reformat the article into a more readable layout with better fonts and spacing.

But here’s where Textise feels different. Reader modes are still design-aware, meaning they keep images and basic formatting and rely on the browser to figure out what the “main article” is. Textise, on the other hand, goes full savage mode. It strips everything down to raw text, no images, no styling, no fluff. In a way, Reader Mode is like switching to a clean reading theme… while Textise is like opening the internet in Notepad. And honestly, depending on the day (or how chaotic the webpage is), both have their moment.
And maybe that’s the best part about it. In a web that’s constantly trying to grab attention, Textise just quietly steps back and lets you focus. Sometimes, all it takes to make the internet better… is less internet.
