FLASHGALE reports the atmosphere above us and the sky beyond it.

We publish for readers who follow storms, lightning, tornadoes, climate signals, meteor showers, the Moon, the visible planets, small bodies and the fast-moving science around the sky. Our newsroom model is B2C, but our standard is source-led: we work from agencies, observatories, mission updates, public datasets, field reporting, imagery and careful verification.

Our editorial range is deliberately broad because public interest in these subjects is broad. A heat dome, a lightning outbreak, an asteroid close approach, a meteor shower peak, a geomagnetic storm and a clear-sky observing window all sit inside the same reader routine: people want to know what is happening, why it matters, what can be seen, how reliable the signal is and what to do next.

That is the line we cover. We connect severe weather with practical guidance. We connect climate with measured context. We connect skywatching with timing, visibility and observing conditions. We connect astronomy basics with the entities that readers actually encounter in the news and in the night sky.

Our working geography follows Tier 1 and Tier 2 coverage priorities plus India, because that is where daily public demand, weather exposure, space-news visibility and English-language utility all intersect most clearly. We write in clean English, cite our sources, separate news from analysis and update pages when facts change.

In 2026 our site launches as a focused publisher: not a general interest portal and not a narrow hobby log, but a mass-market specialist publication that treats weather, nature and cosmic events as one connected public-information space. Readers arrive for immediacy, stay for explanation and return because our coverage is organized around entities, events and observable conditions.

We also design pages to be useful under pressure. A storm explainer must be understandable in a minute. A meteor-shower guide must tell the reader when to step outside. An asteroid-risk page must reduce noise, not amplify it. That editorial discipline shapes the entire site.

What we cover

The site is organized around 15 first-level sections. The core desks are Severe Weather, Climate, Lightning, Tornadoes, Wild Weather, Nature, Asteroids, Meteor Showers, Planets & Moons, Skywatching, Astronomy Basics, Sun & Space Weather, Stars & Deep Sky, Space Missions and Video. Together they let us follow both fast news and evergreen reference demand without collapsing everything into one undifferentiated science stream.

Verified public web signal behind the build

Public web checks found a minimal one-page placeholder signal for the domain and no verified publisher contacts or social profiles. FLASHGALE is therefore presented as a clean 2026 launch under a clearly documented editorial model.

Key sections

Top tags and objects

lightning safetytornado warningstorm structurehail coresflood mapsheat domeatmospheric riverauroramoon phasemeteor shower peakvisible planetsdark skycloud coverseeingtransparency

Contact

All verified newsroom communication currently runs through the on-site contact form so that submissions can be routed to editorial review, fact-check review or privacy handling in a controlled way. Open the Contact page for the full form and processing terms.

Public channels

No long-lived public brand profiles were reliably verified during domain research in April 2026; external channels will be linked only after verification.