Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
obituaries.io is a digital memorial registry built for “lives lived on screens.” Rather than a traditional obituary site centered on real names, it creates records around online identities such as gamertags, usernames, and handles. It is aimed at contexts like gaming guilds, streamer communities, forums, crypto identities, and long-term online friendships. Users can search across different names and view memorial pages, tributes, years active online, linked addresses, and community candle-lighting content.
Its core modules include memorial page creation, online identity linking, a searchable registry, community tributes, photo galleries, editorial review, and permanent archiving. In terms of workflow, anyone who knew the deceased can submit a memorial; editors review submissions to prevent duplicates and confirm good intent, with the site stating that most are approved within a day. Friends, teammates, and community members can continue adding remembrance content, making each memorial page feel more like a digital memory maintained collectively by a community. However, the available information does not show common enterprise-software capabilities such as organization-level team collaboration, role permissions, or configurable approval workflows.
Pricing is relatively clear: Basic is free and supports 1 memorial page, 5 identities, and 10 photos; Premium costs a one-time $29.99 and provides unlimited memorial pages/identities, password protection, custom cover images, priority review, and more; Immortal costs a one-time $99.99 and adds permanent Arweave storage, blockchain verification, custom domains, API access, and PDF export. Payments are handled through Stripe, with support for major credit cards, debit cards, Apple Pay, and Google Pay, plus a 30-day refund policy. For third-party integrations, the site only discloses that it indexes 27 platforms and uses Arweave and Stripe; it does not list the specific platforms or provide API documentation.
Its main strength is a distinctive positioning: it addresses the pain point of not being able to confirm and commemorate someone after their online accounts go silent, using online identity as the anchor. The free entry tier and one-time payment model also reduce long-term costs, while editorial review can help maintain content quality. The main drawbacks are that the company entity, country of operation, privacy compliance, data deletion policies, identity verification process, and API details are all undisclosed. For a memorial service, privacy of the deceased, disputes among relatives, malicious submissions, and the reversibility of permanent on-chain storage are all critical issues; the current public information is not sufficient.
Access from mainland China is unknown. Payments rely on Stripe and Apple Pay/Google Pay, while support for domestic Chinese bank cards and local wallets is not stated, which may affect the purchase experience. For users in China, possible comparisons include Legacy.com, ForeverMissed, Ever Loved, MuchLoved, as well as memorial account or online memorial hall services offered by domestic social platforms. Overall, it is better suited to individuals and communities that value online community identities and want to quickly create public memorial pages, rather than organizations that require strict enterprise-grade compliance and permission systems.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on obituaries.io official site.
obituaries.io is an Unknown Social & Dating provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 5.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach obituaries.io directly.