Memory Murals vs

Memory Murals vs Storii

Last updated May 3, 2026 · Pricing checked May 2026

Storii records your loved one's life stories by calling them on the phone — three scheduled calls a week, plus call-in anytime, with 1,000+ prompt questions and an AI-powered biographical rewrite that turns rambling answers into clean prose. The output is a downloadable audiobook + eBook. Memory Murals is a private digital archive where the family records voice stories themselves, organizes photos and video alongside, and grows the archive together over years. Both preserve voices — they just take very different paths to get there.

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Quick verdict

Choose Storii if
Your storyteller is an elderly relative who refuses smartphones, won't use apps, and only feels comfortable answering a phone call.
Choose Memory Murals if
Your family wants a shared archive everyone contributes to — voice, photos, video — and your storyteller can use a phone, tablet, or web link.
Biggest difference
Storii is a phone-only recording service for one storyteller; Memory Murals is a multi-format multi-person archive that runs in the background of family life.
Starting price
Storii: $99/yr ($89 on gift promotion) — published transparently on storii.com — strictly per storyteller (two parents = two subscriptions)
Memory Murals: $12.99/month or $99.99/year (7-day free trial) — unlimited family contributors

Key differences

The conceptual gaps between Storii and Memory Murals — what each one is actually built for.

Phone calls vs flexible capture

Storii's whole model is calling your storyteller on a regular cadence and recording the answer. That's perfect if the storyteller is technology-resistant and only uses a phone. Memory Murals lets the storyteller record by voice, type, or upload photos/video on whatever device they actually use — phone, tablet, or web browser.

Centralized prompt queue vs decentralized execution

Storii calls one designated phone number. Family members can log into the dashboard to write custom prompt questions for the queue and type their own memories into the profile — so contribution exists, but it's managing a single person's automated interview queue. Memory Murals is decentralized execution: every sibling, grandchild, and cousin has their own recorder in their pocket and contributes directly to a shared archive — not all funneling through one phone line.

AI rewrite (with raw audio preserved) vs first-class voice archive

Storii's AI rewrites recorded answers as clean biographical prose for the audiobook + eBook — and importantly, the original raw audio and verbatim transcript are preserved alongside the AI-polished version. Family can toggle between the two. Memory Murals also keeps original voice recordings as first-class audio files with auto-transcription, but the design centers on the recording itself as the artifact, not the rewritten chapter.

Audio book deliverable vs ongoing archive

Storii's output is a downloadable audiobook + eBook — a finished artifact. Memory Murals doesn't produce a single artifact; it builds an ongoing archive that grows as long as the family uses it.

Feature-by-feature comparison

Pricing checked May 2026. Features reviewed from public product pages.

Starting price

Storii

$89–$99/yr per storyteller (gift / annual)

Memory Murals

$12.99/mo or $99.99/yr — unlimited family contributors

Phone-call delivery (no app)

Storii

Yes — core feature

Memory Murals

No — uses app/web link

Works for tech-resistant elderly

Storii

Yes — landline-friendly

Memory Murals

Requires phone or tablet

1,000+ prompt question library

Storii

Yes

Memory Murals

Yes (Vault prompts)

AI biographical rewrite

Storii

Yes

Memory Murals

AI title + summary, original kept verbatim

Photos attached to stories

Storii

Yes — family uploads via dashboard, linked to specific prompt answers in the eBook

Memory Murals

Yes — storyteller captures voice + photo in a single in-app workflow, multi-tagged across archive

Video memories

Storii

No

Memory Murals

Yes

Multiple family contributors

Storii

Yes — family writes custom prompt questions for the call queue and types memories via dashboard, but execution funnels through one storyteller's phone

Memory Murals

Yes — decentralized; every relative records directly from their own device

Original voice preserved as audio file

Storii

Yes — included

Memory Murals

Yes — included

Audiobook + eBook output

Storii

Yes — downloadable

Memory Murals

Not in base plan

Best for

Storii

Tech-resistant elderly storyteller

Memory Murals

Whole-family living archive

How each one works

The actual workflow — what happens after you sign up.

How Storii works

  1. 1Sign up and configure the storyteller — name, phone number, preferred call times.
  2. 2Storii calls the storyteller 3 times a week with a prompt; they answer over the phone.
  3. 3AI transcribes and rewrites the answer as biographical prose; original audio is kept.
  4. 4Family members log in (or get emails) to listen, read, and react.
  5. 5After enough material accumulates, download the finished audiobook + eBook.

How Memory Murals works

  1. 1Start your free trial — no credit card required.
  2. 2Invite family members by email (no app download needed).
  3. 3Anyone records a story by voice, types it, or uploads photos and video.
  4. 4AI generates a title and summary; original audio + photos are preserved.
  5. 5The archive grows — searchable, organized by person and date, exportable for safekeeping.

Pros and cons of each

Honest strengths and weaknesses on both sides.

Storii pros

  • Phone-call delivery solves the single biggest barrier for elderly storytellers — no app, no password, no smartphone required.
  • 1,000+ prompts mean the storyteller never has to think of what to talk about — and family members can write custom prompts to add to the queue.
  • AI biographical rewrite produces readable prose from rambling answers; raw audio + verbatim transcript are preserved alongside, so nothing is lost.
  • Family dashboard lets relatives upload photos that bind to specific prompt answers in the finished eBook.
  • Audiobook + eBook output is a tangible deliverable family can hold or share.
  • Works with landlines — critical for the most resistant demographic.
  • Transparent published pricing — $99/yr (or $89 on gift promotion).

Storii cons

  • 3 calls/week is a fixed cadence — when the storyteller misses calls (illness, travel, no answer), the rhythm dies. Storii's real architectural weakness.
  • No native video memories — the medium is voice and printed text, with family-uploaded photos as bound illustrations.
  • Per-storyteller licensing — two parents = two $99 subscriptions ($198/yr). No family bundle.
  • Family contributors are managers of one person's interview queue, not independent storytellers with their own recorders.
  • If the storyteller passes away mid-subscription, the prepaid year of calls becomes wasted credit.

Memory Murals pros

  • Captures photos, video, AND voice — Storii is voice-only.
  • Multi-person from day one — every family member adds memories, not just one designated storyteller.
  • Original voice recordings preserved as full audio files, not just rewritten transcripts.
  • Cheaper at $12.99/mo and includes the whole family, not a per-storyteller subscription.
  • 7-day free trial — try it before committing.

Memory Murals cons

  • Doesn't call your phone — if your storyteller will literally only answer a landline, Storii is the right tool.
  • No audio book or eBook output in the base plan.
  • Storyteller needs to be able to use a phone, tablet, or web link.
  • Less hand-holding than the Storii phone-call experience.

Best choice by use case

Different jobs-to-be-done get different answers — here's the honest matrix.

Use caseBest pick
Grandma refuses smartphones and only uses a landlineStorii
Capturing voice + photos + video togetherMemory Murals
Multiple siblings + grandkids contributing memoriesMemory Murals
Producing a finished audiobook + eBook from one storytellerStorii
Tech-resistant elderly relative who needs everything done for themStorii
A living family archive across decadesMemory Murals
A storyteller who travels frequently or has unpredictable healthMemory MuralsPhone-call cadence breaks down with missed calls; flexible recording adapts.
Family members in different time zones contributingMemory Murals
A one-storyteller, one-deliverable projectStorii

Which one is right for your family?

Pick Storii if…

  • Your storyteller will not use a smartphone, tablet, or web app — period.
  • You want a finished audiobook + eBook deliverable from one designated storyteller.
  • Phone-call cadence (3x/week) is genuinely the right model for your storyteller.
  • You want the AI to do the writing for you — clean prose from rambling answers.

Pick Memory Murals if…

  • Your storyteller can use a phone, tablet, or web link.
  • You want photos and video memories alongside voice — not voice-only.
  • Multiple family members will contribute to the same archive.
  • You'd rather have an ongoing archive than a finished one-storyteller deliverable.
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Where families get stuck with Storii

Storii's phone-call model is genuinely the best option for the most tech-resistant demographic — but it has a brittleness that doesn't show up until month three. The 3-calls-per-week cadence depends on the storyteller actually answering the phone, and elderly storytellers miss calls for the same reasons everyone else does: doctor's appointments, naps, hearing aids out, traveling to visit a grandkid. When calls get missed for two or three weeks in a row, the rhythm collapses and so does the archive's growth. The per-storyteller licensing model also bites families who want both parents recorded: that's two separate $99 subscriptions running in parallel. And if the storyteller passes away or develops cognitive decline mid-subscription, the prepaid year of calls becomes wasted credit with limited refund flexibility.

Frequently asked questions

Is Memory Murals like Storii?

Same destination, different vehicle. Both preserve a relative's voice telling their stories. Storii does it by calling them on the phone three times a week — perfect for tech-resistant elderly. Memory Murals does it by letting any family member record memories on a phone, tablet, or web link, plus organize photos and video in the same archive.

What if my grandma won't use a smartphone or tablet?

If she literally won't touch a screen device and only uses a landline, Storii is genuinely the right tool — that's exactly what they're built for. Memory Murals needs the storyteller to have access to a phone, tablet, or web browser. We can't call a landline.

Can my whole family contribute stories to Storii?

Partly. Storii allows family members to log into the dashboard, write custom prompt questions that get added to the call queue, type memories directly into the profile, and upload photos that bind to specific prompt answers. What family members can't do is independently record their own voice stories — Storii only calls one phone number. So contribution exists, but it's centralized around one storyteller's interview. If you want every sibling, grandchild, and cousin to record their own voice stories from their own device into a shared family archive, Memory Murals is decentralized by design.

Does Memory Murals produce an audiobook or eBook like Storii?

Not in the base plan — Memory Murals is built as an ongoing living archive rather than a one-storyteller-to-a-book project. You can export memories as audio files and use a third-party service to compile, but it's not bundled.

Which is cheaper?

Storii publishes $99/yr ($89 on gift promotion) — strictly per storyteller. Memory Murals is $99.99/yr for the whole family with unlimited contributors. The per-storyteller distinction is the real cost difference: if you want to record both parents, Storii runs $198/yr; Memory Murals stays at $99.99/yr.

Can I use both Storii and Memory Murals?

Yes — and it's a reasonable setup. Storii calls Grandma on her landline; the rest of the family adds their own memories, photos, and video to Memory Murals. Then everything lives together in the broader archive.

Still deciding?

  • Your storyteller is an elderly relative who refuses smartphones, won't use apps, and only feels comfortable answering a phone call. Storii may fit better.
  • Your family wants a shared archive everyone contributes to — voice, photos, video — and your storyteller can use a phone, tablet, or web link. Try Memory Murals free.

Compare Memory Murals to other apps

More side-by-sides for shoppers comparing options.

Memory Murals vs

StoryWorth

StoryWorth and Memory Murals both help families preserve memories, but they're built for different goals. StoryWorth is a guided story-collection service that turns weekly written responses into a printed hardcover book at the end of a year. Memory Murals is a private digital family archive designed for ongoing storytelling with photos, voice recordings, video, and multiple contributors. In this comparison we look at pricing, features, how each one actually works, and which is the better fit for different families.

See comparison

Memory Murals vs

Remento

Remento and Memory Murals both let families preserve voice recordings of loved ones, but they package the experience differently. Remento is a voice-first 1-year subscription where a parent or grandparent clicks a link, talks for a few minutes, and gets a printed hardcover book at year's end. Memory Murals is an ongoing private family archive where photos, voice recordings, video, and stories from the whole family live in one place. This comparison covers pricing, voice handling, who can contribute, and which one fits different family needs.

See comparison

Memory Murals vs

Autobiographer

Autobiographer launched with Katie Couric's endorsement and uses Anthropic-powered AI to conduct conversational interviews with one storyteller, then assembles the answers into a polished 250-page autobiography PDF. Memory Murals is a private digital family archive that captures voice, photos, video, and stories from multiple living family members in an ongoing format with no fixed deliverable. Autobiographer ships a finished book; Memory Murals builds an ongoing archive — different shapes for different jobs.

See comparison

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