Free streaming usually comes with a catch. Sometimes it is a sign-up wall. Sometimes it is a barrage of ads. Sometimes a chaotic interface makes you wonder whether the stream is worth the trouble. However, this isn’t what you’d experience with famelack.
Previously known as TV Garden (which I think was a catchier name), the platform rebranded at the start of 2026 with a note from its team that what they are building has grown beyond TV. Same core idea but bigger ambitions. It is a free, browser-based platform for streaming live TV channels from around the world. If that sentence alone does not make you open a new tab, keep reading.
I use this website to stream live channels from around the world for free
One website, endless news channels, zero subscription fees.
Spin the globe, pick a country, and watch anything
Geography class, but actually fun
When you land on famelack, what you see is a colorful 3D globe floating against a dark, starry background. It is a web-based service that provides access to free live TV channels from around the world via an interactive 3D map interface. It looks like a playful design flourish at first, but it is actually the main navigation system. If you rotate it, tap or click a country, you’ll see a sidebar populated with all available live channels broadcasting from that region. Sports, news, general entertainment, religious programming, government channels — whatever happens to be streaming publicly from that nation at that moment.
You can also skip the globe entirely and use the country list on the right. It is an alphabetical directory, and, interestingly, I found that it includes not just countries but also territories, such as Aruba, Åland Islands, American Samoa, and Anguilla. The library itself is broad. famelack says it provides access to live TV channels from more than 130 countries, and the experience supports that scale. The platform offers over 1,000 high-quality live TV channels, spanning sports, news, and entertainment across multiple genres, with minimal buffering or lag.
You can also filter by category in the left sidebar if you already know what you are looking for, whether that is sports, news, movies, or music. Your favorite channels are stored locally in your browser, so there is a lightweight sense of personalization without the data-sharing trade-offs that usually come with it. Beyond the globe navigation, you can also jump into random streams, which adds a certain serendipity to browsing and helps you stumble upon content you would never have thought to search for.
The platform aggregates content by linking to publicly available IPTV streams and plays them directly in your browser using the Video.js player, hosting nothing itself. This architecture aligns with a legal curation model rather than piracy, answering the age-old question of whether IPTV is legal or not, as famelack hosts no copyrighted files on its servers. Instead, it acts as a dynamic directory, pulling from public repository links maintained by the collaborative IPTV community on GitHub.
Beyond live TV, famelack also includes a dedicated Radio mode that lets you jump between countries or categories and tune into online radio stations from around the world. The experience is strikingly similar to Radio Garden, which I consider the most addictive live radio site online. It uses the same rotating 3D globe interface to turn global radio browsing into an addictive little discovery tool.
The catch is still live TV
Yes, there are a few asterisks
Famelack is impressive, but it is not magic. The biggest limitation is baked into the nature of the service: live streams can break, disappear, buffer, or be region-restricted. While you might be used to the stability of official free internet TV channels you can watch online, some streams may be unavailable outside certain countries, and you may see a globe lock icon indicating regional restrictions. I also observed that some radio stations may occasionally go offline or be temporarily unavailable.
That means you should treat famelack as a discovery tool rather than a guaranteed replacement for a paid streaming service. If you want a specific sports match, premium drama, or on-demand movie library, this is not that. While there are dedicated ways to watch free live TV channels on Plex or access robust on-demand catalogs, famelack is closer to international channel surfing, with all the delight and unpredictability that implies.
The interface, while clean, may also feel sparse if you expect polished streaming-service extras. There are no glossy recommendation rows, watch histories, user profiles, or elaborate channel descriptions. Personally, I think that restraint works in famelack’s favor, but if you’re looking for a Netflix-style dashboard, you may find it bare.
Stream quality also varies considerably by country and channel. Some broadcasts are crisp and stable; others look like they were encoded in 2009 and are being served over a slow connection. Your own internet speed plays a role, but so does the quality of the source stream, which famelack cannot control.
Worth bookmarking, even if it stays on a second screen
Famelack will not replace your primary streaming service, and I don’t think that’s the developers’ intention. What it does instead is fill a gap you may not know exists: actually free, global, private live TV in a browser tab with no friction. In a streaming market that grows more expensive and more fragmented every year, that is a rarer and more valuable thing. So, bookmark it, spin the globe, and see what the rest of the world is watching tonight.











