BookTok is reviving reading among young people in Luxembourg
How an online readers' community is (really) filling bookshops.
How an online readers' community is (really) filling bookshops.
A simple format, a universal joke: the anatomy of a travelling meme.
Smart-casual-with-sneakers is no longer a transgression: it's become the country's unofficial uniform.
Three letters, millions of views: the 'point of view' format is everywhere — including very local versions.
Slow a hit down, drown it in a little echo: the 'slowed + reverb' recipe fits the Grand Duchy's train-and-tram commutes perfectly. We break it down.
The hashtag that empties bookshop shelves is creeping onto Luxembourg's bookcases, and here's why.
A chair, a lamp, a kettle: online, object design has become a niche sport Luxembourg quietly plays.
The big AI-assistant craze lands in Luxembourg with a very local twist: the bots have to juggle French, Luxembourgish, German and Portuguese without dropping the thread.
The "I know this exact spot" meme format is sweeping the web, and in Luxembourg it has found its perfect muse: roundabouts, never-ending roadworks and squares everyone recognises.
Far from twitchy shooters, the "cozy gaming" wave bets on calm, pretty pixels and zero pressure — and it fits the long evenings of a multicultural Luxembourg perfectly.
The time matters less than the fundraiser: the charity run has become where sport meets the common good.
Voice AI assistants are booming, and in the Grand Duchy we're learning to whisper to our phones without looking lost.
The 'sun-rain-wind-sun' meme format is killing it online, and nobody lives it harder than the Grand Duchy.
Tournaments, teams, streams: the local competitive scene is gaining visibility and a very active community.
Small Bluetooth trackers are becoming a mainstream reflex, and in Luxembourg they mostly cling to transport badges.
Leave at 6pm, sleep in a tent, clock in the next morning: the micro-adventure trend fits Luxembourg like a glove.
The 'close-to-home travel' trend is bringing short train trips back in style, and from Luxembourg several big cities are just a platform away.
Up at 5, lemon water and journaling before sunrise: the morning routine floods the feeds, but in Luxembourg real life has a say.
From Portuguese to German, hits aren't all in English anymore: decoding a wave tailor-made for Luxembourg.
All-night bingeing has become a national sport, and multilingual Luxembourg switches languages without a second thought.
Stuck, resigned, funny: cross-border commuters turned the traffic jam into viral content. Why it works.
These days a release doesn't end with the credits: the real sequel plays out online, in theories and fan edits.
Fiction shot vertically, in one-minute episodes, is reshaping what we still call a series.
After years of solo play behind a headset, the thrill of a room full of towers and cables is roaring back.