If you searched for "FineVoice" and landed here, there is a fair chance you were looking for one of two entirely different products. Fine Voice, at finevoice.org — the site you are reading — is an independent, browser-based AI voice generator: text to speech, a public voice library, and consent-first voice cloning, all running in a web page. FineShare FineVoice, at finevoice.ai, is a desktop voice changer and audio recording suite for Windows, made by the software company FineShare. Similar names, different companies, different products, no affiliation in either direction.
This page exists because the name collision genuinely confuses people, and the fastest fix is a plain description of both products side by side. No sales pitch against the other tool — they barely compete, since one turns text into speech and the other changes your live voice. Here is how to tell which one you were actually looking for.
The short version
| Fine Voice (finevoice.org) | FineShare FineVoice (finevoice.ai) | |
|---|---|---|
| What it is | AI voice generator (text to speech) | Voice changer and recording suite |
| Made by | Independent (finevoice.org) | FineShare |
| Runs on | Any modern browser | Windows desktop (download required) |
| Core job | Turn written text into spoken audio | Change your live microphone voice in real time |
| Typical user | Video creators, narrators, podcasters | Gamers, streamers, callers, meme makers |
| Voice library | 300+ public AI voices | Voice effects and AI voice filters |
| Voice cloning | Yes, consent-first | Yes, within its suite |
| Sign-up to try | No, for first renders | Download and install first |
| Real-time voice changing | No | Yes, its core feature |
| Soundboard | No | Yes |
If the table already answered your question, the two links you might want are the Fine Voice AI voice generator or FineShare's site at finevoice.ai. If you want the fuller picture, read on.
What Fine Voice (finevoice.org) is
Fine Voice is a web application for generating speech from text. You open the site, type or paste a script, choose a voice, and render audio — in the browser, with nothing to install, and with no account required for your first renders.
The main pieces:
- Text to speech: the core workflow. Script in, natural-sounding narration out, with control over voice choice and delivery.
- A public voice library: more than 300 voices across narration, conversational, character, and multilingual styles, browsable and previewable before you commit to one.
- Consent-first voice cloning: you can create a custom voice from recordings, built around verified permission from the voice's owner rather than an open upload box. Cloning someone without their consent is not a supported use case, by design.
- Free tier and credits: first renders are free without sign-up; longer scripts and regular use run on credits, with paid plans for frequent publishers.
The typical Fine Voice user is making something with a script: YouTube narration, product demo voiceovers, podcast segments, e-learning modules, audiobook drafts. The defining characteristic is that the audio is generated from text, produced ahead of time, and exported as a file you place into an edit.
What Fine Voice does not do: it does not change your live voice. There is no real-time microphone processing, no soundboard, no integration with Discord or game audio. If that is what you came for, you want the other FineVoice — described next, fairly.
What FineShare FineVoice is
FineShare FineVoice is a desktop audio application for Windows made by FineShare, a company that builds a range of consumer audio and video tools. FineVoice is their voice-focused suite, and its center of gravity is real-time voice changing: it processes your microphone input live, so your transformed voice comes out in Discord, in games, on Zoom calls, or in a recording, as you speak.
Based on FineShare's own materials as of mid-2026, the suite includes:
- A real-time voice changer with a large set of voice effects and AI voice filters — character voices, celebrity-style effects, gender shifts, and creative filters you can apply to your live microphone.
- A soundboard for triggering sound effects and clips on hotkeys mid-game or mid-call, a staple feature for streamers.
- Audio recording and extraction tools, including multi-source recording and pulling audio from video.
- Its own text-to-speech and voice cloning features, as companion tools within the suite.
- A virtual audio driver that routes the changed voice into other applications, which is the piece that makes the real-time integration work and also why it is a desktop install rather than a web page.
It is a genuinely capable piece of software for its job. If you want to sound like a robot in a raid, run a soundboard on stream, or record and process voice audio on a Windows machine, FineShare FineVoice is squarely aimed at you, and it would be silly for us to pretend otherwise. It follows a freemium desktop model — a free version with limits, paid plans for full features — with current details on FineShare's site.
What FineShare FineVoice is not built around: browser-based use (it is a Windows download), and script-to-narration workflows as the primary job. It has TTS features, but the product's identity is live voice transformation, not a narration studio.
Why the names collide
"Fine voice" is simply a natural pair of English words for anything in this space, and both products arrived at it independently. FineShare's product carries the company's Fine- prefix branding (FineShare, FineCam, FineVoice); finevoice.org uses the words as a plain product name. Neither is imitating the other — this is the same kind of collision that gives the software world a dozen unrelated products named "Nova" — but search engines mix the results together, users end up on the wrong site, and support inboxes on both sides presumably receive questions about the other product. Hence this page.
To be explicit about the relationship: there is none. Fine Voice (finevoice.org) is not made by FineShare, is not a web version of FineShare FineVoice, and has no business relationship with FineShare. If you have a billing or support question about FineShare FineVoice, finevoice.ai is where to take it; we would not be able to help even with the best intentions.
You want Fine Voice (finevoice.org) if...
- You have a script, article, or text and want it read aloud in a natural AI voice.
- You are producing video narration, podcast audio, or e-learning voiceover to export as files.
- You want to browse and preview hundreds of voices before choosing one.
- You want to try before creating an account — first renders here require no sign-up.
- You are on any platform — Mac, Windows, Linux, a tablet — since everything runs in the browser.
- You need voice cloning with a documented consent process, for example cloning your own voice for your own content.
Start at the voice generator or browse the voice library.
You want FineShare FineVoice if...
- You want to change how your live voice sounds in games, calls, or streams, as you speak.
- You want a soundboard with hotkey-triggered effects.
- You need desktop audio recording and processing tools on Windows.
- You are a streamer or gamer whose use case is real-time, not pre-rendered.
- You are comfortable downloading and installing a Windows application and configuring an audio driver.
For that, head to FineShare's site at finevoice.ai — and genuinely, if real-time voice changing is the job, a browser TTS tool like ours is the wrong tool and their desktop suite is the right category.
Can you use both?
Sure, and some creators plausibly would. A streamer might use FineShare FineVoice live on stream, then use Fine Voice to generate clean narrated intros or highlight-video voiceovers from a script afterward. The products occupy adjacent but non-overlapping slots in an audio workflow: one transforms speech as it happens, the other creates speech from text that was never spoken. The only real conflict between them is the search results page.
Whichever one you were looking for, you now know where it lives.
Frequently asked questions
Is finevoice.org the same as FineShare FineVoice?
No. Fine Voice at finevoice.org is an independent browser-based AI voice generator for text to speech and consent-first voice cloning. FineShare FineVoice at finevoice.ai is a Windows desktop voice changer and recording suite made by the company FineShare. They are different products from different companies with no affiliation.
Is Fine Voice a voice changer?
Fine Voice (finevoice.org) is not a real-time voice changer. It generates speech from text using a library of 300+ AI voices and supports consent-based voice cloning, producing audio files you can use in videos and podcasts. If you want to change your live microphone voice in games or calls, a desktop voice changer such as FineShare FineVoice is the right category of tool.
Does FineVoice require a download?
It depends which one you mean. FineShare FineVoice is a Windows desktop application, so it requires downloading and installing software, including a virtual audio driver for real-time use. Fine Voice at finevoice.org runs entirely in the browser with nothing to install, and first renders do not require an account.
Which FineVoice is free?
Both have free options with different shapes. Fine Voice (finevoice.org) offers free renders in the browser with no sign-up, with credits and paid plans for longer scripts and heavier use. FineShare FineVoice follows a freemium desktop model with a limited free version and paid plans for full features; current details are on FineShare's site.

