Comparison
BE · Belgium

Brussels metropolitan area

2,639,000 residents50.85°, 4.35°
TA · Taiwan

Kaohsiung

2,733,964 residents22.61°, 120.30°

Brussels metropolitan area and Kaohsiung, side by side.

01 · Basics

At a glance

Population
2,639,000
2,733,964
Metro populationno data
Area (km²)
—
no data
2,951.852
Density (per km²)no data
Elevation (m)
13
9
06 · Vibes

What locals say

Synthesized from upvoted comments on each city's subreddit.
Brussels metropolitan area

Brussels feels like a multilingual, bureaucratic, very lived-in capital rather than a polished showcase city. Daily life is shaped by a mix of EU institutions, local neighborhoods, and a commuter-heavy metro area, so some parts feel orderly and office-driven while others feel patchwork and a little rough around the edges. People who live here often value the access to transit, international jobs, and good food, but they also have to put up with congestion, inconsistent cleanliness, and a city that can feel fragmented between districts. The overall mood is pragmatic: convenient enough for urban life, interesting enough to stay, but rarely described as easy or charming in a seamless way.

Common complaints
  • Congestion and traffic4
  • Cleanliness and maintenance4
  • Fragmented urban feel3
  • Bureaucratic, office-heavy atmosphere3
  • Weather gloom3
Common praises
  • Food and beer5
  • Public transit and connectivity4
  • International access and jobs4
  • Green pockets and neighborhood variety3
  • Cultural mix3
Kaohsiung

Kaohsiung comes across as a large southern Taiwanese city that feels easier and calmer to live in than its size might suggest. People repeatedly describe getting around as straightforward, with MRT, buses, and walkable areas around the harbor, museums, and night markets doing a lot of the daily heavy lifting. The city has a relaxed, practical rhythm: decent cafés, temples, public art, shopping centers, and university/expat pockets, but also the usual foreigner hassles around housing searches, paperwork, and finding English-friendly services. It is not presented as a nonstop party city; instead, it feels like a place where you can live comfortably, eat well enough, and fill your weekends with coastal outings, cultural sites, and events.

Common complaints
  • Housing search and landlord friction4
  • Limited English convenience in daily services3
  • Traffic and driving in the city core3
  • Nightlife and late-night transport limitations2
  • Weather and seasonal heat/cold uncertainty2
Common praises
  • Easy transit and getting around5
  • Peaceful, relaxed atmosphere4
  • Harbor and waterfront scenery4
  • CafĂ©s, coffee, and casual hangouts3
  • Cultural and recreational variety4

“It was one of the most peaceful and relaxing places I’ve ever visited. Getting around was super easy with the buses and trains, and the weather was just right.”

r/taiwan· 25 votes

“There were so many great places to explore: temples, art installations, night markets, and outlet stores.”

r/taiwan· 25 votes
07 · Culture

Food & nightlife

Brussels metropolitan area
Food

Brussels has a food scene that punches above its weight for a metro area that is also a political and administrative center. Everyday eating is anchored by fries, sandwiches, bakeries, chocolate shops, and casual brasseries, but the city also has a deep bench of ethnic restaurants and solid midrange dining in neighborhood streets away from the tourist core. Beer matters here in a very local way, not just as nightlife fuel: cafés, breweries, and bars often treat it as part of the city's identity. The best eating is often found by wandering district by district rather than expecting one single restaurant zone to define the city.

Nightlife

Nightlife in Brussels tends to be dispersed rather than concentrated, with different pockets for bars, clubs, and late-night drinking depending on the neighborhood. It is a city where a lot of the social life happens in cafés and beer bars first, and only some areas stay lively very late. The scene can feel more relaxed and adult than flashy, though there are pockets with student energy, queer nightlife, and occasional club activity. Compared with bigger European capitals, people often describe it as decent but uneven: enough options if you know where to go, but not a city that automatically hands nightlife to you.

Kaohsiung
Food

The food scene is described as solid and convenient rather than flashy, with night markets, local eateries, and a few enthusiastic calls for specific cuisines like Korean food or vegetarian options. One visitor said the food was not their favorite but still alright, which fits the overall tone: good enough to enjoy daily, but not always the main reason people come. Coffee gets unusually strong praise, especially pour-over cafés, so the city seems to have a growing specialty-coffee layer alongside the usual Taiwan street-food and market staples. People also seem to use Kaohsiung as a base for practical eating—cheap meals, night-market snacks, and neighborhood restaurants—more than for destination fine dining.

Nightlife

Nightlife does not dominate the conversation, but it appears to exist in pockets rather than as a citywide identity. People ask about sports bars, concert travel, and how to get home after late nights, which suggests nightlife is event-driven and centered around a few districts, big venues, and bar options rather than an all-night party strip. The city seems more comfortable with concerts, night markets, and casual drinking than with a relentless club scene. If you live there, nightlife likely means choosing between bars, live events, food stalls, and late transit logistics.

08 · Reality check

Weather vs. what locals say

Brussels metropolitan area
By the numbers

—

How locals feel

On paper, Brussels has a temperate climate that does not sound extreme, but locals often talk about it as gray, damp, and overcast for long stretches. Rain is part of the rhythm of the city, and even when temperatures are mild, the lack of bright sun can make the place feel cooler and more subdued than the numbers suggest. The weather is less about dramatic storms and more about persistent drabness, quick showers, and long periods of cloud cover. People who stay usually adapt their routines around it rather than expecting many truly sunny stretches.

Kaohsiung
By the numbers

—

How locals feel

The weather is generally framed positively, but in a grounded way rather than as a selling point. One visitor called it "just right," while others ask about January layers and rainy typhoon days, which suggests mild winters are appealing but humidity, rain, and seasonal shifts still matter in planning daily life. Compared with northern Taiwan, Kaohsiung is likely perceived as warmer and more comfortable for outdoor wandering most of the year, yet still hot enough that people think about clothing, shade, and indoor backup plans. In other words, locals and repeat visitors seem to accept the climate as part of the city’s rhythm: pleasant when it cooperates, and something you work around when it doesn’t.

09 · Summary

In short

Not enough data to form a verdict.

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