AIStoryHub vs Squibler
Squibler runs $29.99–89.99/month with bundled AI credits and covers novels, screenplays, and memoirs. AIStoryHub is free, runs on your own API key or a free built-in model, and is built around one thing specifically: fiction that sounds like you wrote it.
At a glance
| AIStoryHub | Squibler | |
|---|---|---|
| Price | Free forever | $29.99–89.99/month (credit-based) |
| AI access | Your own API key, or a free built-in model | Bundled credits, no BYOK option |
| Focus | Fiction specifically | Novels, screenplays, memoirs, general content |
| Voice approach | Voiceprint: tone, pacing, POV, banned words you set directly | "Adapts to your vision" — no published mechanism |
| Cliché avoidance | 742-entry corpus, published and downloadable | Not published |
| Structure | Scene/chapter version history, @-references | Full-manuscript generation (200-300 pages) with consistency features |
| Free tier | Everything, unlimited | 1,000 AI credits/month, limited |
The details
Squibler's Plus tier is $29.99/month (about $15.83/month billed annually) for 10,000 AI credits. Pro is $89.99/month (about $49.17/month annually) for unlimited credits. AI access is bundled into the subscription with no option to bring your own key. AIStoryHub charges nothing at any tier. Bring your own key and pay your provider directly at published rates (a full chapter with Generate PRO runs about $0.04), or use the free built-in model at no cost.
Squibler is built to cover novels, screenplays, memoirs, and general content generation in one platform. That breadth is real value if you're writing across formats. AIStoryHub deliberately doesn't do that. It's built around one problem: fiction that reads generic because it lacks a consistent, configured voice. The Voiceprint (tone, pacing, POV, banned words you set) and the published 742-entry corpus at aistoryhub.co/corpus only make sense in a fiction-specific tool.
Squibler's headline capability is generating a full 200-300 page manuscript with consistency features across the whole thing. AIStoryHub works scene by scene and chapter by chapter, with every generation logged as a revertible version. That's a real workflow difference, not just a pricing one: one approach front-loads a big draft you then edit, the other builds incrementally with your voice steering each pass.
Who each one is for
AIStoryHub fits if
Squibler fits if
Questions
It can, if that's the workflow you want: a large first draft in one pass that you then edit down. AIStoryHub is built around a different assumption, that the drafting happens scene by scene and chapter by chapter, with your Voiceprint shaping each pass and full version history so any generation can be reverted. Neither is wrong; they're different bets on how a manuscript gets written.
For bundled AI access across multiple formats (novels, screenplays, memoirs), it's in a similar range to other bundled tools. AIStoryHub's comparison is simpler: there's no bundled-AI tier to price against, because there's no bundled-AI tier at all. You pay your provider's API rate directly, or nothing on the free built-in model.
1,000 AI credits/month is enough to test the tool, not to draft a manuscript. AIStoryHub's free tier isn't a trial: every feature, including unlimited Generate PRO usage with your own key, is available from day one.
AIStoryHub is built specifically for fiction: novels, novellas, short stories, fan fiction. If you're writing screenplays, memoirs, or general non-fiction content across formats, Squibler's broader scope is the better fit for that specific need.
No credit card. No subscription. No catch.