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🌍 Explore

Curated by Vinod Kumar Jain & Amit Jain · free to browse · updated 2026-07-05

Explore is the atlas layer of All Frontier Global — a browsable map of 184 countries, every continent, and 2,596 cities, all linked in one connected graph. Start anywhere: a continent overview, a country profile, or a single city, then follow the connections the way you'd trace a route on a paper map — except here, every stop carries data.

The layer runs deeper than borders. Global cities get dedicated profiles, because places like Singapore or Dubai behave less like hometowns and more like hubs in the world economy. Locations capture the spots that matter but don't fit a tidy city list. And India's states are mapped individually, because a country of 1.4 billion is really two dozen economies wearing one flag.

Use Explore to orient before you commit. Compare regions side by side, drill from continent to country to city in three clicks, and build the mental map that makes every other section — trade, relocation, cost of living — click into place.

Explore Explore

Countries184 pagesPer-country trade and relocation profiles, one guide page for each of 184 countries.Country50 pages50 singular country pages at /country/<slug>/ profiling nations for trade intelligence.Continents7 pagesContinent guide pages.Global Cities106 pagesGlobal-cities pages — international city intelligence profiles.Cities309,378 pagesCity atlas of 2,596 urban entries adding sub-national geographic depth.Locations185 pages185 location pages anchoring geographic context for trade intelligence across the graph.States36 pagesIndian-state trade profiles.

Frequently asked

What's the difference between cities and global cities?

All 2,596 cities get profiles covering the essentials — where they sit, how they fit their country, what they're known for. Global cities are the subset that operate as international hubs for finance, migration, and trade, so their pages go deeper on connectivity and economic pull. Think of them as cities with passports of their own.

Why do Indian states get their own pages?

Because India is too large and varied to treat as a single entry — Kerala and Punjab differ more than many neighboring countries do. Mapping the states individually lets you compare them on climate, economy, and culture the same way you'd compare countries.

How does Explore connect to the rest of the site?

Every place is a node in the same graph, so a city links up to its country, out to comparable cities, and across to trade and relocation data. Get oriented geographically here, then jump to visas, taxes, or cost of living without losing your place.