3 YouTube settings you need to change now if you want to blindside the algorithm (and save your brain)
I beat YouTube's algorithm and finally got to see the videos I wanted
Look, we all enjoy falling down a YouTube rabbit hole or catching up on our favorite creators. What I hate is the feeling that the app is actively trying to hijack my brain while I do it.
I miss the old YouTube: the fun, slightly chaotic playground where you discovered genuinely cool stuff instead of being force-fed algorithmic slop. Today, the default experience has become an exhausting gauntlet of noisy thumbnail previews, addictive Shorts, and frictionless autoplay timers.
Google might want you passive and scrolling forever, but a quick two-minute interface tune-up is all it takes to strip away the traps, silence the chaos, and put you back in charge.
1. Stop the mindless Shorts scroll
The Shorts shelf is a relentless pipeline designed to catch you off guard, pulling you into an addictive, endless stream of short-form videos when you only meant to watch a single clip.
Because YouTube deliberately blocks you from deleting the Shorts tab entirely, you have to use the app's internal boundaries to break the loop. Setting your daily viewing limit to absolute zero creates a hard digital speed bump that snaps you out of a mindless scroll the second you slip up.
To build this circuit breaker, open the YouTube mobile app, tap your profile icon, hit the settings cog, and select the time management menu. From there, tap on the option for shorts feed limit and dial it down to zero minutes.
To clean up the rest of your homepage, navigate back to your main feed, scroll down to the shorts shelf, tap the three-dot menu in the upper corner of that section, and select the option to show fewer shorts.
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2. Freeze the noisy feed previews
Few things are more irritating than trying to read a video title while the video itself silently starts playing, flashing captions and demanding your attention before you've even chosen to click.
Google calls this "playback in feeds," but in reality, it's just a data-hogging gimmick designed to trick your brain into constant stimulation. Turning it off immediately stops the ambient chaos and stops YouTube from secretly burning through your mobile data on videos you never asked to watch.
To kill it, tap your Profile icon, open the Settings menu, scroll down to Playback and tap it. Then look for Playback in feeds and switch it entirely to Off.
If you still want a slight compromise when you're at home, you can select Wi-Fi only, but turning it off completely is the only way to make your homepage truly static again.
3. Kill the automatic play loop
Autoplay is designed to take advantage of the fact that it is always easier to do nothing. Before you can even process the video you just finished, a countdown timer appears and shoves you straight into a loosely related clip you never asked for.
Forcing a hard stop at the end of a video breaks this endless chain, giving you a second to breathe and actually decide how you want to spend your time.
Fixing this is incredibly simple. Tap your Profile icon, open the Settings menu, Playback, then toggle off Autoplay next video.
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Kaycee is Tom's Guide's How-To Editor, known for tutorials that get straight to what works. She writes across phones, homes, TVs and everything in between — because life doesn't stick to categories and neither should good advice. She's spent years in content creation doing one thing really well: making complicated things click. Kaycee is also an award-winning poet and co-editor at Fox and Star Books.
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