Based on this monthly average questions per day query and this questions per day query on SEDE, Stack Overflow is getting significantly over 2000 questions per day.
Currently, the RSS feed for newest questions (/feeds/newest) holds the latest 30 questions. It would need to be refreshed and retrieved by an RSS reader nearly 80 times a day. That's every 18 minutes. And that's assuming a steady flow of questions and not bursty behavior. The Stack Overflow Newest feed alone would need to be requested at least every 5-10 minutes.
On top of all of this, page request rate limits (which appear to apply to all feeds as well) are network wide. Although the details aren't public, there are 173 sites on the network. Each site has RSS feeds for recent, featured, hot, hot weekly, and hot monthly. This is in addition to a large number of tag feeds (that support AND and OR operations, optional sorting), user feeds, question feeds. Based on personal experience, both local and cloud-hosted RSS readers can very quickly run into rate limiting issues. Once Stack Overflow becomes involved, not only are you running into rate limiting issues, but that means missing posts.
I don't think that the tag-based question feeds or the various hot feeds are the solution if the desire is to be notified of new questions in a huge range of tags. If the question is improperly tagged or the tags in the query aren't maintained, questions that should be retrieved won't be. In the case where a cloud-based aggregator is being used, many people with their own feeds also prevents the aggregator from implementing 1 request for a feed and would increase the risk of rate limiting not only SO feeds, but feeds from across the network.
It feels like the solution is on Stack Overflow's side. I'm not sure what this looks like, though. Increasing the number of posts in the feed from 30 could be part of it. Slowing down the rate at which the feed is updated to reduce the questions in the feed could allow closed and deleted questions to not filtered out. Changing the page request rate limit for feeds could also be a good change, but would have to be carefully thought out.