Like WhatsApp Web, the first time you access it, you'll be presented with a page that includes a QR Code. WhatsApp users may access the app by scanning the displayed QR Code with their QR Code scanner.
Now, unlike Telegram and Line, you won't need to use your email address to sign into WhatsApp. When a QR Code is scanned using a WhatsApp Smartphone, the user is sent to the same chat screen seen when using WhatsApp Web.
There will be a list of your past interactions with other users on the left, and a page listing all of your chats with the contact you choose on the right.
Just as on WhatsApp for smartphones, you can send and receive text messages, videos, photographs, voice messages, documents, stickers, and more on the desktop version of the service. All of your chats, whether they're text messages or phone calls, are encrypted from beginning to finish, so that no one except the people involved in the discussion, and not even WhatsApp, can read what's being said.
However, you may be little dissatisfied with the desktop version of WhatsApp since it looks and functions precisely like WhatsApp Web. In addition, if you wish to use WhatsApp on a PC, you'll need to have WhatsApp installed and active on your smartphone at all times; if your phone goes offline, you won't be able to send or receive messages.
Unlike its desktop counterparts, LINE and Telegram don't need to be running in conjunction with any other apps on the phone in order to function; they may be used alone.
In a nutshell, the features of are quite similar to those of WhatsApp Web. However, there is no harm in downloading the desktop version if you use WhatsApp for your daily communication.