Yes, making it call the libraries already in Debian dynamically would be a lot of work. We'll see if someone will eventually work on it or not, there are certainly applications that would require it.
And yes, Oxide is not drop-in replacement, it has different API etc. It's however a fully up-to-date and secure Chromium based browser engine similar to QtWebEngine otherwise. But then again, Oxide is currently only available in Ubuntu.
Yes, making it call the libraries already in Debian dynamically would be a lot of work. We'll see if someone will eventually work on it or not, there are certainly applications that would require it.
And yes, Oxide is not drop-in replacement, it has different API etc. It's however a fully up-to-date and secure Chromium based browser engine similar to QtWebEngine otherwise. But then again, Oxide is currently only available in Ubuntu.