Categories

Three broad groups of tools. For a finer breakdown (AI writing, image, PDF, SEO, etc.), see the tools directory or Smart Packs.

Every category page lists the tools in that group plus practical tips and FAQs that apply to the whole set. Open a tool card when you know the job; open a category when you are exploring what Sounez can do in that area.

Creator Tools

Use these when the work is public-facing text: captions, bios, hashtags, video tags, business names, or rough creator-rate planning.

Design Tools

Use these when you need a visual asset or CSS detail, such as palettes, gradients, favicons, shadows, patterns, fonts, or placeholders.

Utility Tools

Use these for practical one-off jobs: compressing images, converting files, counting words, generating passwords, making QR codes, or checking quick math.

How these categories add value

Categories are not just navigation shortcuts. They group tools by the kind of decision a visitor needs to make: publishing text, preparing design assets, or completing a practical file or utility task. Each category page adds use cases, privacy expectations, tips, and questions that apply to the full group.

Find the right page

Start with a category when you know the problem but not the exact tool name.

Understand limits

Read group notes before uploading files, using AI, or relying on generated output.

Keep moving

Related tools and guides help turn one result into a finished workflow.

What to expect on each category page

Every category page adds context that does not fit on individual tool pages — things that apply to the whole group rather than a single job. Here is what each one includes:

Extended intro

A paragraph that explains how the category's tools are grouped, which run in the browser, and which use a server — so you know before you open anything.

Common situations

Three real scenarios where visitors reach for the category, written as starting points rather than feature lists.

Practical tips

Specific advice that applies across the group — format quirks, accuracy limits, upload rules — that would be repetitive to include on every individual tool page.

Content policy

A plain-language summary of what inputs are not allowed and what you are responsible for verifying before using generated output.

Questions about categories

Why are there only three categories?

Three categories keep navigation simple for first-time visitors. Creator Tools covers publishing text and numbers, Design Tools covers visual assets and CSS, and Utility Tools covers file conversion, analysis, and everyday utilities. If you already know the tool name, the tools directory has a finer breakdown with search and filtering.

Do all tools in a category behave the same way?

No. Within each category, some tools run entirely in your browser (no data leaves your device) while others use a server-side step for AI generation or file conversion. Each tool page and category page states clearly which applies.

Can I browse by task instead of category?

Yes. The tools directory lists every tool with its description. Smart Packs group related tools by workflow — for example, a full social media pack or a study-session pack — rather than by technical category.

Where can I report a problem with a tool in a category?

Use the flag icon on a comment, the contact page for general feedback, or the DMCA page for copyright concerns. Each category page also has a comment section on individual tool pages for tool-specific questions.

How do I know whether a tool runs locally or on a server?

Open the tool page and read the privacy note near the top of the content section. Browser-only tools never upload your files; server-backed tools explain what is processed and for how long.

Looking for a multi-step workflow?

Smart Packs take one brief and return several related outputs — captions, listing copy, study notes, or image SEO fields — step by step. They save time when several pieces of a job must match each other. Browse Smart Packs