Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Qbell is a Japanese utility site whose main products include the voice-recognition assistants “タンポポ” and “アイリス” for drawing software, as well as more entertainment-oriented VUI/desktop assistants such as “ボイにゃ~” and “しらす戦隊 しらレンジャー”. Rather than being a general-purpose generative AI product, it focuses on using speech recognition to turn keyboard input, shortcuts, or macro actions in the drawing workflow into voice-triggered commands, reducing the need to constantly switch back to the keyboard while creating artwork.
Based on the available content, “タンポポ” appears to be the simpler version, while “アイリス” is positioned as the more professional option. Features such as a command search box, appearance customization, and support for entering shortcut/macro key assignments are being added over time. A typical use case is an illustrator using voice commands while drawing to execute shortcuts, macros, or specific keyboard inputs. “ボイにゃ~” is a simpler VUI application, while “きゃらポッドF” allows users to create desktop mascots with simple scripts and is described as redistributable freeware. It is worth noting that the page does not disclose the speech-recognition engine, AI model, supported languages, offline/cloud processing model, or recognition accuracy, making it difficult to assess the upper limit of its AI capabilities.
The site clearly offers a 30-day free trial, which is useful for testing whether the tools fit an individual workflow before purchasing. After the first product purchase, users receive a 1500 yen discount coupon. Payment methods include credit card, PayPal, and WebMoney, and credit card payments now support 3D Secure. Unfortunately, the captured content does not show the specific prices of each product, whether they are subscription-based or one-time purchases, or the upgrade policy.
Its strengths are a focused use case, a friendly trial period, and lightweight automation around drawing-software shortcuts. Version news also indicates that it is still receiving updates and bug fixes. The drawbacks are the limited public information, especially the lack of details on privacy, API integration, Chinese-language support, and accuracy metrics. It is best suited to drawing-software users working in a Japanese-language environment who are willing to configure voice commands, as well as individual creators who want to build desktop mascots. It is less suitable for teams that require Chinese speech recognition, enterprise-grade compliance, or open API integrations.
There is no information in the main content about access from mainland China, so actual network testing is required. For payment, PayPal and credit cards may be usable, but WebMoney is less convenient for Chinese users. If access, language, or payment becomes a barrier, alternatives include built-in system voice control, drawing-software shortcut/macro tools, general voice-to-shortcut utilities, or local desktop pet/mascot creation tools.
⚠ 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 qbell.jp official site.
qbell.jp is an Japan AI Apps provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach qbell.jp directly.