Access real-time world news from 1144 RSS sources across 15 categories, 5 regions, and 20 languages. Interactive 3D globe, custom feeds, and RSS export.
Most people consume news from two, maybe three sources. The same outlets, the same editorial slant, the same geographic lens. They think they're informed. They're not. They're seeing a sliver of reality filtered through a handful of editorial decisions made in one country, in one language, for one audience.
The world is bigger than that. And understanding it requires hearing from more than one corner of it.
That's why we built a world news aggregator that pulls from over 1,144 RSS sources across 20 languages, 15 categories, and 5 regions — completely free, with no algorithmic manipulation, no account required, and no paywall.
In 2026, the information landscape is fractured in ways that would have been hard to imagine a decade ago. Social media algorithms have sorted billions of people into echo chambers so precise that two neighbors can live in completely different informational realities. One person's "obvious fact" is another person's "thing I've literally never heard of."
This isn't a problem you can solve by switching from one news source to another. Swapping CNN for Reuters, or the BBC for Al Jazeera, just trades one set of editorial priorities for another. Every outlet has blind spots. Every editor makes choices about what's front-page material and what gets buried. Every newsroom carries the cultural assumptions of the country it operates in.
The only reliable antidote is volume and diversity. Read the same story from multiple sources. Notice what gets emphasized and what gets omitted. Compare how an event is framed in Washington, London, Tokyo, and Nairobi. That's not obsessive — it's media literacy.
Eli Pariser warned us about filter bubbles in 2011. Since then, the algorithms have only gotten more sophisticated. Modern recommendation systems don't just show you what you're likely to click — they model your emotional state, your political leanings, your susceptibility to outrage, and your willingness to share content that makes you angry.
The result is a global population that's more connected than ever and less mutually comprehensible than ever. Americans arguing about domestic politics have no idea what South American outlets are reporting about the same trade policy. Europeans debating migration haven't read a single article from the countries people are migrating from. Asian coverage of global tech regulation tells a completely different story than Silicon Valley press releases.
You can't fix this by being smarter or more disciplined. You fix it by changing your information diet at the structural level. And that means accessing news from sources that no algorithm would ever show you.
Professional journalists and researchers have known this for decades. No serious foreign correspondent relies on a single source. Intelligence analysts read newspapers from a dozen countries every morning. Academic researchers doing media studies need access to coverage from multiple regions and languages to do their work.
The problem was always access. Finding, aggregating, and organizing 1,000+ news sources manually is a full-time job. Translation adds another layer of friction. Figuring out which sources are credible in a language you don't speak is nearly impossible without local knowledge.
We built our news aggregator to solve exactly this problem — to give everyone the same breadth of coverage that used to be reserved for newsrooms with international bureaus.
Let's get specific about what the world news aggregator actually offers.
Every source in the aggregator is an RSS feed from a real news organization. No AI-generated summaries. No content farms. No rewritten clickbait. You get the actual headlines, the actual summaries, and direct links to the actual articles from the original publishers.
RSS is the backbone because RSS is honest. It delivers content in chronological order with no engagement optimization. What the newsroom published is what you see. No algorithm decided to boost one story because it would make you angry, or suppress another because it doesn't generate clicks.
The aggregator organizes news into 15 distinct categories so you can focus on what matters to you: world news, politics, business, technology, science, health, sports, entertainment, environment, education, culture, opinion, investigative journalism, conflict, and economics. Each category pulls from dedicated sources that specialize in that beat, not generalist outlets that cover everything superficially.
This matters because category-specific sources go deeper. A health category pulling from medical journals, public health organizations, and science desks produces fundamentally different coverage than a general news site that runs one health story a day between celebrity gossip and weather reports.
The world doesn't divide neatly into regions, but organizing sources geographically helps surface stories that global outlets routinely ignore. The aggregator covers North America, Europe, Asia, Middle East and Africa, and Latin America, with dedicated sources from each region.
Regional filtering is where the aggregator becomes genuinely eye-opening. Switch to the Middle East and Africa region and you'll find stories that never appear in Western media. Focus on Latin America and you'll discover an entire continent's worth of economic, political, and cultural developments that the English-speaking press barely acknowledges.
This is the feature that matters most. News in 20 languages: English, Turkish, Spanish, French, German, Portuguese, Italian, Dutch, Russian, Japanese, Korean, Chinese, Arabic, Hindi, Polish, Ukrainian, Swedish, Indonesian, Vietnamese, and Czech.
Why does language matter? Because a story reported in its original language carries nuances that translations often lose. Editorial tone, cultural context, the assumptions that don't need to be explained to a local audience — all of these shift when you read coverage in the language it was written in.
For multilingual readers, this is transformative. If you speak Spanish and English, you can compare how American and Latin American outlets cover the same immigration story. If you read Arabic and French, you can see how North African events are framed differently in Algiers and Paris.
Even if you speak only one language, filtering by language helps you find sources from specific regions. Indonesian-language sources cover Southeast Asian stories that English-language outlets in the region might skip. Ukrainian sources cover the granular details of Eastern European politics that wire services compress into a paragraph.
The news aggregator includes an interactive 3D globe that visualizes where news is happening in real time. This isn't a gimmick — it's a fundamentally different way to process information.
When you read a list of headlines, your brain processes them as text. When you see those same stories plotted on a spinning globe, you start to see patterns. Clusters of activity in regions you weren't paying attention to. Blank spots where major events are happening but coverage is sparse. Geographic relationships between stories that text alone wouldn't reveal.
The DeckGL-powered map view offers a flatter, more analytical perspective. You can zoom into specific regions, see source density, and understand the geographic distribution of coverage. It turns abstract "world news" into something spatial and concrete.
For readers who prefer dedicated feed readers, the aggregator publishes its own RSS feed at /news-feed.xml. Subscribe to it in your RSS reader of choice and get a curated stream of global news delivered directly, no browser required.
This is particularly useful for researchers and journalists who already have established RSS workflows. Instead of manually adding hundreds of individual feeds, you get a single subscription that aggregates over a thousand sources.
If you write about international affairs, you need to know what other countries are reporting. Not what the wire services say they're reporting — what they're actually reporting. The aggregator gives you direct access to source material from dozens of countries, organized and searchable.
Foreign correspondents can use it to monitor local coverage in countries they cover. Editors can use it to identify stories that deserve attention before they hit the English-language press cycle. Fact-checkers can compare claims against reporting from multiple regions.
Media studies, political science, international relations, communications — any field that involves analyzing how information flows across borders needs access to multi-source, multi-language news data. The aggregator provides that access without the cost and complexity of commercial news monitoring services.
Researchers studying how different countries frame the same event can pull coverage from multiple regions and languages simultaneously. Graduate students doing content analysis can access primary sources without expensive database subscriptions.
Living abroad means losing touch with news from home. The mainstream media in your new country won't cover the stories that matter to you — the local election, the economic reform, the cultural event that everyone back home is talking about.
Language filtering makes the aggregator a lifeline for expats. Filter to your home country's language, focus on the right region, and you're reading the same news your family and friends are reading. No translation artifacts, no cultural context lost, no editorial reframing for a foreign audience.
Reading news in a language you're studying is one of the most effective ways to build vocabulary and comprehension. The aggregator lets you immerse yourself in real, current news content in 20 languages — not textbook exercises, not simplified readers, but the actual news as native speakers consume it.
Start with topics you already know well. If you follow technology news in English, try reading tech coverage in the language you're learning. Your existing knowledge of the subject provides context that helps you decode unfamiliar vocabulary.
You don't need to be a journalist or researcher to benefit from diverse news sources. If you have friends, colleagues, or business partners in other countries, understanding their information environment helps you understand their perspective. If you vote, understanding how your country's policies are perceived abroad gives you context that domestic coverage alone cannot provide.
Media literacy isn't a professional skill. It's a civic one.
Here's a practical approach to using a multi-source world news aggregator effectively, without it consuming your entire day.
Start with one region you know nothing about. Pick a region you've never followed — Latin America, Southeast Asia, the Middle East — and spend fifteen minutes reading headlines. Don't try to understand everything. Just notice what stories are being covered that you've never seen in your usual sources.
Compare a single story across three sources. When a major international event happens, find coverage from three different regions or languages. Notice what each outlet emphasizes, who they quote, and what context they include. This exercise alone will permanently change how you read news.
Use categories to go deep. Instead of skimming everything, pick one category per day and read it thoroughly. Monday is science. Tuesday is economics. Wednesday is investigative journalism. Depth beats breadth for actual understanding.
Subscribe to the RSS feed. Add /news-feed.xml to your feed reader so global news shows up alongside your other subscriptions. The friction of opening a separate app is often enough to break a habit, so make it frictionless.
Check the 3D globe weekly. Spend five minutes spinning the globe and noting where news clusters appear. It's a fast way to identify regions and stories you should be paying attention to but aren't.
Every feature of the news aggregator is free. No premium tier, no account required, no data collection, no engagement optimization.
This is a deliberate choice. Access to diverse news sources shouldn't be a luxury. The people who most need to break out of filter bubbles — people who get all their news from one app, one social media platform, one cable channel — are exactly the people who won't pay for a news aggregation tool. Making it free removes the last barrier.
Algorithm-free delivery is equally deliberate. The moment you introduce algorithmic ranking, you've recreated the problem you were trying to solve. Our aggregator shows you what was published, in the order it was published. Your attention is not a product to be optimized. It's yours.
The world is complex, and understanding it requires hearing from more than one voice. A world news aggregator with over a thousand sources in twenty languages isn't a luxury for professionals — it's a basic tool for anyone who wants to be genuinely informed rather than algorithmically entertained.
Bookmark the news page, subscribe to the RSS feed, spin the globe, and start reading news the way it should be consumed: widely, critically, and on your own terms.