V2: Fewfeed

I’ve been in the content aggregation game for nearly a decade. I cut my teeth on the original RSS, survived the death of Google Reader, and have tried every "modern" alternative from Feedly to Inoreader to self-hosted Tiny Tiny RSS. My use case is niche but demanding: I monitor approximately 450 sources ranging from obscure security bulletins, arXiv paper releases, GitHub commit feeds, Substack newsletters, and Twitter lists.

Alex M. (Automation Architect)

April 13, 2026

I’m keeping my subscription for another six months. If they fix the OPML import and add an export feature for read-later, it will be the undisputed king of feed aggregators. Until then, it’s a brilliant, expensive, and slightly temperamental beast.

FewFeed V2 Review: The Aggregator Grows Up – Powerful, Polarizing, and Packed with Potential fewfeed v2

4.2/5

The built-in read-later feature is beautiful, but it has no export function. If you decide to cancel FewFeed, you cannot bulk export your saved articles. You have to copy-paste each one. This feels like a deliberate retention tactic, and it erodes trust. I now use Pocket for read-later and only use FewFeed for real-time scanning. I’ve been in the content aggregation game for

I imported an OPML file with 200 feeds from Inoreader. FewFeed V2 choked. It duplicated 30 feeds, marked 15 as "invalid" (they worked fine elsewhere), and stripped all my folder hierarchies. Their support admitted this is a "known issue with nested tags." For a tool marketed as a "migration destination," this is embarrassing. I had to rebuild my 450-source list manually over a weekend. Not fun.