It looks like you're referring to a specific technical flag or an element from Chrome’s internal new tab page (like most_visited9 – possibly a grid position or a debugging class).
April 13, 2026 | Reading time: 3 min
If you’ve ever poked around Chrome’s internals— chrome://flags , chrome://version , or the browser’s local state files—you might have stumbled upon strange class names like most_visited1 , most_visited9 , or similar. These aren’t errors; they’re Chrome’s internal handles for your tiles on the New Tab Page. chrome newtab most_visited9
Open your Chrome inspector, count your shortcuts, and see if there’s a most_visited9 waiting to be used. It looks like you're referring to a specific
Since that exact phrase isn’t a standard user-facing feature, I’ll assume you’d like a , using most_visited9 as a placeholder for the 9th tile in the grid. Open your Chrome inspector, count your shortcuts, and

