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Singapore defies easy description. It is a city, a country, and an island all at once — a place where a 10-minute taxi ride takes you from a gleaming financial district to a Hindu temple festooned with carved gods to a Chinese opera house to a Mal...
Chile is one of the most geographically extraordinary countries on earth — a sliver 4,300km long and nowhere more than 180km wide, stretching from the driest desert on the planet in the north to the sub-Antarctic wilderness of Patagonia in the so...
Ethiopia is unlike anywhere else in Africa — and arguably unlike anywhere else on earth. It has its own calendar (currently in the 2010s while the rest of the world is in 2026), its own writing script, its own time system, its own Orthodox Christ...
Cyprus is the third-largest island in the Mediterranean, located at its eastern end — closer to Beirut than to Athens, closer to Turkey than to Italy, but very much a European Union country with European standards of infrastructure, food, and safe...
Italy has a well-worn tourist trail: Rome, Venice, Florence, the Amalfi Coast, Cinque Terre. They're famous for a reason, and they're worth seeing. But Italy is a country of 20 regions and thousands of years of layered history. What follows are ei...
Of all the countries in Southeast Asia, Myanmar (formerly Burma) remains the least traveled. That's partly circumstance and partly its own remote beauty — a country the size of Texas pressing up against Thailand, India, China, and the Bay of Bengal, ...
Canada is the second largest country in the world by area — 9.98 million km², slightly larger than the entire continent of Europe — and has a population of approximately 40 million people. That ratio of land to people produces a country where 90% of ...
Brunei Darussalam occupies a small enclave on the island of Borneo, surrounded on three sides by the Malaysian state of Sarawak and open to the South China Sea on the north. With a population of approximately 450,000 and oil reserves that have made i...
Idaho is the 14th largest US state and sits between Washington, Oregon, Nevada, Utah, Wyoming, and Montana. It is most famous nationally for potatoes (it produces about 30% of the US crop) and for being the state most people struggle to locate precis...
Alabama is the 22nd largest US state, bordered by Tennessee to the north, Georgia to the east, Florida and the Gulf of Mexico to the south, and Mississippi to the west. It is a state whose national reputation is dominated by its civil rights history ...
North Macedonia is a small, landlocked country in the southern Balkans bordered by Albania, Serbia, Bulgaria, Greece, and Kosovo. It was part of Yugoslavia until 1991, spent the following 25 years in a diplomatic standoff with Greece over its name (r...
Hungary sits in the Carpathian Basin at the geographic heart of Europe, bordered by Austria, Slovakia, Ukraine, Romania, Serbia, Croatia, and Slovenia. It is a landlocked country of 10 million people with a language related to nothing else in Europe,...
Kuwait is a small, oil-rich emirate at the northwestern tip of the Persian Gulf — bordered by Iraq to the north and Saudi Arabia to the south. With a population of around 4.8 million (of whom roughly 70% are expatriates), Kuwait is one of the world's...
Croatia's Adriatic coastline stretches for 1,800 kilometres and includes over 1,200 islands, 47 of which are permanently inhabited. The Dalmatian section — roughly from Split in the north to Dubrovnik in the south — is arguably the finest stretch of ...
Morocco is not the first place most surfing enthusiasts think of — but it absolutely should be. The country's Atlantic coastline stretches for over 1,200 km, receiving powerful, consistent swells from the North Atlantic that produce world-class waves...
Sweden's reputation is clean design, sensible social democracy, and stunning fjords — all true. But Sweden also contains some of the most wonderfully strange places in all of Europe. Here are five that prove the country has a deeply weird side worth ...
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines — SVG to those who visit regularly — is the kind of place that competes for very little mainstream attention and is quietly delighted about it. While the northern Caribbean buzzes with cruise ship terminals and resort...
When most people picture Fiji, they picture white sand, turquoise water, and overwater bungalows. Suva, the capital, gives you something completely different — and arguably more interesting. It is a real working city with a market, a museum, a vibran...
Cameroon is called "Africa in miniature" — and the nickname earns its keep. Within the borders of a single country you'll find dense equatorial rainforest home to gorillas and forest elephants, an active stratovolcano that towers over the Atlantic co...
Goa has been India's designated escape hatch for decades. British package tourists in the 1980s and 90s. Israeli backpackers on their post-army trip. Russian charter flights in the 2000s and 2010s. Domestic Indian tourists who've discovered it more ...
Most New Zealand itineraries follow a predictable path: Auckland, Rotorua, Wellington, Queenstown, Milford Sound. It's a fine itinerary. But travelers who deviate from it — who take the ferry across Cook Strait and drive west at the top of the South ...
The famous Japan loop — Tokyo, Hakone, Kyoto, Nara, Osaka — is famous for a reason. It's extraordinary. But Japan is the kind of country where every corner you don't reach on the first trip becomes the reason for the second one. Here are the places t...
Most people planning a Middle East trip think of Dubai's towers or Jordan's Petra. Far fewer think of Oman — and that's one of the things that makes Oman so extraordinary. It's a country that hasn't been over-explained, over-touristed, or turned into...
The continental United States is roughly 2,800 miles wide and 1,600 miles tall. Walking it — really crossing every state on foot — is one of those challenges that sounds like a thought experiment but has, in fact, been done. Several times. By people ...
Canada has a branding problem. Not a bad one — "nice, clean, polite, cold, hockey" is perfectly respectable — but it understates the country dramatically. Canada is enormous, geologically weird, historically complex, and home to some of the world's m...
Wyoming is the 10th largest state in the US by area and the smallest by population — with just 580,000 residents, it has fewer people than the city of Memphis, Tennessee. Most Americans know it as the home of Yellowstone and maybe a cowboy hat or two...
When people think of Colorado, they think of Denver's craft beer scene, Aspen's ski slopes, and Boulder's crunchy-tech energy. Few think of Littleton — and that's exactly what makes this city of 47,000 people just 10 miles south of Denver's downtown ...
Paris has been the most visited city on Earth for much of the past century — and it consistently earns that status. The Ville Lumière is, quite simply, one of the greatest cities ever built: a 2,000-year accumulation of architecture, cuisine, art, fa...
Puerto Rico's 270+ miles of coastline encompass an extraordinary range of beach types — calm shallow Caribbean bays on the south and west, powerful Atlantic surf on the north, secluded island beaches on Culebra and Vieques, and bioluminescent waters ...
Oslo is a capital city on its own terms — not trying to compete with London or Paris, but increasingly confident in what it does uniquely well. At roughly 700,000 people, it combines genuine city amenities with remarkable proximity to nature: you can...