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 V1 was, to be blunt, a promising but frustrating beta. It had the "killer feature" of multi-source de-duplication, but it crashed often and had a UI that looked like it was built on a dare. When FewFeed V2 dropped three months ago with promises of "enterprise reliability" and "AI categorization," I was skeptical. After 90 days of daily driving it, here is the honest verdict. 1. The De-Duplication Engine is Finally Flawless The original promise of FewFeed was to solve the "same story, 15 sources" problem. In V1, this was a mess—it often flagged entirely different articles as duplicates if they shared a keyword. V2 has introduced a semantic similarity hash . It no longer looks at URLs or titles; it looks at meaning . I saw a major security breach reported by Krebs, BleepingComputer, and The Record. FewFeed V2 bundled them into a single card with a "View 3 sources" toggle. It didn't miss a single legitimate duplicate. This alone saves me 45 minutes a day. fewfeed v2
Alex M. (Automation Architect)
April 13, 2026
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. I’m keeping my subscription for another six months
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. FewFeed V1 was, to be blunt, a promising
My wife, a casual blogger, tried to set up FewFeed V2 and gave up in 15 minutes. The settings menu has 78 options. There are three different ways to "mute" a source, and they all behave differently. You need to understand concepts like "feed decay rate" and "dedup confidence threshold." A "Simple Mode" toggle is desperately needed. This is not a casual tool; it’s a Swiss Army knife with too many blades.