“Edge to many requests” is a short way of saying that Microsoft Edge has received too many requests from you in a short time. The browser blocks the extra requests to protect the website and itself from overload.
In daily life, you might see it while rapidly refreshing a page, clicking “submit” many times, or running a script that pings a site too quickly. When it happens, the page simply shows “Edge to many requests” and pauses further action until things slow down.
Meaning & Usage Examples
If you refresh a shopping page ten times in two seconds, Edge may step in and say “Edge to many requests.” It’s the browser’s polite way of telling you, “Slow down a bit.”
Context / Common Use
This message appears mostly on Windows PCs when using Edge. It’s not an error with the website; it’s Edge protecting the connection. Waiting a few seconds or closing and reopening the tab usually clears it.
Can I turn this warning off?
No. It’s built into Edge for safety, so the only fix is to reduce the number of rapid requests.
Does it mean the website is broken?
No. The website is fine; you just sent too many requests too quickly.
How long do I have to wait?
Typically 5–30 seconds. Refresh once or reopen the tab and continue at a normal pace.
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