Decision Support · Side-by-side
Compare pricing, strengths, and use cases so it is easier to pick the right fit.
Change tools
For everyday users who need to crank out product descriptions, ad copy, or SEO blog posts in bulk, Copysmith is the practical choice—but only if you work on a desktop and don't mind a learning curve. Fiction is better if you want an all-in-one brand-and-website builder that generates visuals and pages from a single idea, but it's pricier and harder to leave once you're in. The biggest difference: Copysmith is a focused copywriting engine for e-commerce, while Fiction is a full brand ecosystem that builds your entire online presence.
Copysmith
Fiction
Scores at a glance
Choose Copysmith if
Choose Fiction if
Key differences
Facts side by side
| Copysmith | Fiction | |
|---|---|---|
| Free plan | ||
| Mobile app | ||
| API access |
Common questions
Yes, for pure blog writing Copysmith is better because it has SEO integration and long-form generation. Fiction is designed more for building websites and brand visuals, not long articles.
No, neither tool has a mobile app. You need a desktop or laptop browser to use them.
Fiction is easier to start with because it walks you through building a whole site from a single idea. Copysmith requires you to set up brand voice, connect integrations, and tune parameters before you get good results.
Copysmith likely has a lower starting price (though it's not published), and its bulk generation gives more value per dollar for text. Fiction's higher price and lock-in make it a bigger commitment.
Not easily. Fiction's proprietary ecosystem makes migration difficult—you may lose your site design and brand assets if you switch platforms.
Copysmith wins for practical copywriting at scale; Fiction wins for all-in-one brand creation, but both require a desktop and have unclear pricing.
If you mainly write copy—product descriptions, ads, blog posts—go with Copysmith and use it on your computer. If you want to build a whole brand identity and website fast, Fiction is exciting but be ready for vendor lock-in. Both lack mobile apps, so plan to work from a desk.