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Fewfeed V2 - _hot_

April 13, 2026

V1’s mobile app was a web wrapper that drained battery. V2’s native app is lightning fast. Offline mode actually works—I downloaded 1,500 articles before a flight, and the read-later sync was flawless upon reconnection. The gesture controls (swipe left to summarize, right to archive) are intuitive. It’s replaced my morning Twitter scroll entirely.

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

You can now filter using traditional regex (for power users) OR natural language. I set a filter: "Only show me articles about 'AI regulation' if they mention 'EU' or 'California,' but hide anything that is just a press release." The LLM parses this with about 95% accuracy. I've cut my feed noise by 70%. Where FewFeed V2 Stumbles (The Frustrations) 1. The Pricing Tiers Feel Punitive FewFeed V2 starts at $8/mo for 100 feeds, which is fine. But to unlock the "Semantic De-dup" (the main feature), you need the Professional tier at $24/mo . To get the "Hybrid Mode" with LLM filters, that's $39/mo . For a solo power user, this is steep. I understand servers cost money, but hiding the core differentiator behind a mid-tier paywall feels like bait-and-switch. The free tier (20 feeds, no de-dup) is essentially useless.

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. April 13, 2026 V1’s mobile app was a

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.

Most readers force you to choose: strict chronological (chaos) or AI-prioritized (you miss things). FewFeed V2 introduces a "Hybrid" timeline. It shows you your "Critical Feeds" (e.g., your boss’s blog, your main client) in real-time, interleaved with AI-summarized clusters of lower-priority feeds. This means I never miss a server outage alert, but I can also scan 200 marketing blog posts in 30 seconds. No other aggregator does this without feeling janky. The gesture controls (swipe left to summarize, right

Alex M. (Automation Architect)