"If it is something you can do through your current Chrome browser, then you can do it on a Chromebook. If it is something that runs outside of the browser, then you can NOT do it on a Chromebook. Chromebooks are designed to run from the Internet. It does not run Windows, so it would be unable to run programs designed for Windows such as Office and games. There is nothing that prevents someone from writing a version of "Office" or a game that would run on the Chrome OS. But it has not happened yet. And unless the Chrome OS becomes a bigger success then it currently appears it will, no one is likely to do it any time in the foreseeable future. While you can not run Office (or any other current word processing program) on a Chromebook, there are on line Word Processor and Spread Sheet programs that you can use. And you can play on line games." I found that in Yahoo answers (not the best source, but better than nothing)
Bruh chromebooks really aren't that great tbh. Would only recommend them if you intend to run Linux on it.
I think I'm better off per chasinganother HP my previous laptop broke by my lil cousin doing a backflip on it