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Frequently Asked
Frequently Asked
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Everything you want to know about NewsMonster — what we write, how we write it, and why we think learning should never be boring.
About NewsMonster
NewsMonster covers science, astronomy, mathematics, economics, psychology, thought experiments, and unknown facts that most people have never come across. The focus is always on making complex ideas genuinely accessible — not dumbed down, but explained properly in a way that actually sticks.
Infotainment is a blend of information and entertainment. Most educational content fails in one of two ways — it's either so dry you can't stay awake, or so shallow it teaches you nothing. NewsMonster sits in the middle: real depth, real facts, written in a way that keeps you genuinely reading.
Wikipedia gives you facts in a clinical, encyclopedic format. Textbooks give you facts with no personality. NewsMonster takes those same facts and presents them as engaging stories with context, analysis, and a point of view. It's the difference between reading a manual and talking to someone who genuinely loves the subject.
Content & Accuracy
Every article is researched using credible sources — scientific papers, verified data, and established references. Accuracy matters more than being right, which means if something is ever off, it gets corrected — no excuses, no deflection.
New articles go up regularly, but the focus is always quality over quantity. Every piece is carefully researched and written to deliver real value — not filler content just to hit a publishing schedule. When something goes up, it's worth your time.
Yes, completely free. No subscriptions, no paywalls, no login required. Every article on NewsMonster is open to everyone — just click and read. That's the deal, and it's not changing.
Get Involved
Yes — and please do. If there's a weird phenomenon, an unsolved mystery, or a mind-bending concept you're curious about, reach out. The best article ideas often come directly from readers who are asking the exact questions nobody else is writing about.
Still have a question? Head back to NewsMonster and explore — chances are the answer is already waiting for you in an article.