Read the web one full-screen story at a time.
RSS Gram turns RSS, Atom, and JSON feeds into a swipeable reel so you can browse quickly, focus on one source when you want to, and save posts locally for later.
Works well with feeds from
A simpler way to keep up with the sites you follow.
RSS Gram focuses on the reading loop itself: choose your sources, swipe through the latest stories, focus one feed when needed, and keep saved posts on-device.
Everything the product promises comes from the app itself.
RSS Gram is not trying to be a publishing dashboard or a social platform. It is a focused reading tool for people who still want the open web to feel readable.
RSS, Atom, and JSON Feed support
Pull different feed formats into the same reading surface without changing how you browse.
Focused source mode
Temporarily narrow the reel to a single publication whenever you want a deeper reading session.
Fast vertical browsing
Swipe story to story with full-screen cards that make quick reading feel deliberate instead of cramped.
Per-feed controls
Turn noisy sources off, remove feeds you no longer need, and keep your stack tidy.
Local-first saved posts
Saved items and feed settings stay on-device, so the app remains lightweight and personal.
Built with Expo
The same codebase targets iOS, Android, and web while keeping the product surface focused.
Readers use RSS Gram to keep the open web manageable.
The value is not hype. It is a calmer flow for following the sources you already trust.
Frequently asked questions
If you have anything else you want to ask, reach out to us.
What kinds of feeds does RSS Gram support?
The app supports RSS, Atom, and JSON Feed sources, so most standard publication feeds can be added directly.
Does the app require an account?
Not for the core experience. RSS Gram is designed as a local-first reader, so you can work with feeds and saved posts without mandatory account setup.
Can I focus on just one source?
Yes. The app includes a focused source mode so you can temporarily narrow the reel to a single publication.
What gets stored locally?
Configured feed sources, saved post IDs, and focused-source state are stored on-device using AsyncStorage.
Can I save stories for later?
Yes. You can save posts locally while browsing and come back to them without losing your place in the feed.
What platforms does the project target?
The app is built with Expo and is intended to run across iOS, Android, and web.
Is RSS Gram trying to replace the original article page?
No. It is a reading and triage layer. When a story deserves more time, you open the original link in the browser.
Why present feeds as a reel instead of a list?
The full-screen card approach gives each story more context and helps you move quickly without everything blurring into one long list.
Can I customize the source list over time?
Yes. You can add new feed URLs, disable noisy ones, remove old sources, and keep refining the stack as your reading habits change.