I am using Tampermonkey on Google Chrome. If you don't want make system-wide changes, you can use userscripts to override the default CSS. This one doesn't seem to work for horizontal scrollbars on Chrome. I had to edit the CSS to be ::-webkit-scrollbar. Stylish actually lets you install as a userscript if you want. The following actually the same as the userscript below. You can customize it make it a little different. This one works well if you like windows 10 scrollbars. Here are a couple of the scrollbars I've found: ![]() ![]() I posted my solution in another question but will post the same answer here Roberts suggested that you could just override the default CSS with stylish instead of using userscripts, which I agree that is a better solution, so you don't have to run potentially malicious javascript.
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