Piperic
similar sites
‹ ProfileAI ReportTools

Sites similar to fuzzletales.com

Fuzzle Tales | Remembering to adventure · ranked by shared content topics & relevance
69match
theadventureshelf.com
The Adventure Shelf
1 shared topicsfiction
67match
bstbooks.com
Adventures in Text: Attempting to write a way through the world
1 shared topicsfiction
67match
mtlarchive.com
MTLARCHIVE - Where every novel is a new adventure waiting to be discovered
1 shared topicsfiction
66match
mrbakelly.com
The Wondrous Adventures of
1 shared topicsfiction
66match
theadventuregirls.com
The Adventure Hideout: Home of The Adventure Girls
1 shared topicsfiction
66match
albertmorrow.com
Award-winning writer of paranormal western adventures | Albert Morrow, writer
1 shared topicsfiction
65match
bryanromaine.com
Bryan Romaine's Comedy Adventure
1 shared topicsfiction
65match
simongreybooks.com
Simon Grey – High adventure in haunted Japan
1 shared topicsfiction
64match
terribleadventurers.com
We're So Bad At Adventuring – Terrible Decisions Make Great Adventures
1 shared topicsfiction
64match
cosmonaut-ai.com
Cosmonaut - AI Choose-Your-Own-Adventure Stories for Families
1 shared topicsfiction
64match
looraa.com
Looraa | Worlds Waiting to Open
1 shared topicsfiction
64match
msrocket.com
The Adventures of Ms Rocket – Updates Mondays and Thursdays
1 shared topicsfiction
63match
bycolinholmes.com
By Colin Holmes – I make up interesting characters and write about their adventures
1 shared topicsfiction
63match
andrewpankratz.org
Dusty Trails – The high-adventure fiction of Andrew Pankratz
1 shared topicsfiction
63match
thamestales.com
Slaney Tales
1 shared topicsfiction
63match
muanatales.com
MuanaTales 🌠
1 shared topicsfiction
63match
palaceoftrash.com
Palace of Trash – Rideshare Tales of Los Angeles
1 shared topicsfiction
63match
lornebronstein.com
Lorne Bronstein – Tales of things that go bump in the night
1 shared topicsfiction

How the match score works

Each match is a 0–100 similarity score — the higher it is, the more two sites resemble one another. It’s computed automatically from our own crawl data (never from what a site says about itself) by combining several independent signals, so a high score means several of them point the same way:

No single signal decides the result — they’re blended together. Treat the score as a way to rank candidates rather than an absolute percentage; the chips on each result show which signals contributed.