How is this possible? I'm sitting here with an i5-4690, 32GB RAM, Firefox 50 with about 50 tabs open 1.5GB RAM usage, about half a second to get a usable new tab, and it crashes at least once every few days.
Literally the only reason I'm on Firefox is tab groups, but my performace is basically identical with tab groups disabled.
Win 10 / Arch on the same hardware, slightly better performance booted into Win 10.
Used to run Win8.1 on this machine, Win 10 runs it better.
Used to run Ubuntu on this machine, Arch runs it better.
It would make my day if there was a silver bullet that made FF fast, or at least not crash all the time. The same machine can handle literally 10 times more Chrome tabs without any trace of struggle. But I prefer FF for a few things, so sort of stuck in between.
Funny. I use Firefox on my Arch system, and at times I had to stop and remove tabs because they were becoming an unorganized mess (>600 tabs). I've never had much issues with responsiveness unless some particular website I've opened locks up, and with tab groups and tab load only on click, I can easily manage a lot of tabs without much memory use.
You could try checking your RAM, I used to have an issue with FF crashing quite frequently, but found that it was part of a larger issue of having corrupt RAM on board.
Literally the only reason I'm on Firefox is tab groups, but my performace is basically identical with tab groups disabled.