I’m from the timeline that is slightly older than you by the looks of it. The first couple of releases of IE were garbage, and I would argue it was IE4 where the writing was clearly on the wall for Netscape. Mind you, if Netscape had continued apace, then it should have been fine. 1995 Netscape Navigator 2 was full of promise and life. A little bundle of hopes and dreams. IE2 around the same time was the Cuckoo in the nest. Ugly, dishonestly planted, and soon taking all the nutrients from the Netscape hatchling until it withered away.
Ahh Microsoft; ever were you the great teacher on the reality of power.
IE4 is the first what I would call "recognizably modern" browser, because it's the first browser that has a concept of "reflow" accessible through Javascript. I recall writing some Javascript attached to a button that would add another row to a table, and that new row would have a button in it with attached Javascript that would add a new row. Yeah, it's not how you'd do it today, and I crashed the browser more than once trying to do this sort of thing, but it worked like you expect a browser to work today; a row was added to the table and the page reflowed around it.
Prior to that, nothing worked that way. What limited page modification there was after formatting couldn't ever cause a reflow, and you couldn't even do all the things that couldn't cause a reflow, either. Reflows were simply not a thing through Javascript. (Deferred image loading could cause reflows, and a few other special cases the browser would handle, but you didn't have generalized access to it.)
Netscape tried to compete but they clearly couldn't. They tried to build a "layer" concept, which was ultimate just several chunks of page that could be completely rewritten, but couldn't be reflowed as we'd use the term today. It was a weak concept that was very difficult to use for anything.
IIRC, Netscape qua Netscape never solved this. It was only after Firefox that it could compete. There was a long time where IE was really the only recognizably-modern browser.
It, too, fell behind, its internal architecture becoming simply too limiting. But there was a period of time where it was legitimately the best browser, no matter how anyone may have felt about it.
Ahh Microsoft; ever were you the great teacher on the reality of power.