Not always. A higher score is a strong signal, but it should not be the only deciding factor. A slightly lower-scored name may be better if it fits your audience, sounds better in conversation, leaves more room for future products, or feels more distinctive for your positioning. Use the score to narrow the list, then make the final decision with brand fit, clarity, memorability, domain options, and risk tolerance in mind.
FAQ
Frequently asked questions
Answers about AI brand name generation, domain checks, app store validation, reports, payment, and brand review limits.
Accuracy, ownership, and next steps
How to use generated names responsibly and what to do before launch.
Related FAQs
What does the brand score mean?
The score combines validation signals and AI brandability signals into a practical recommendation. Higher scores generally indicate names that look more available, memorable, pronounceable, and useful for the product description you provided.
How should I choose between brand names with similar scores?
When scores are close, treat the names as a shortlist rather than trying to pick by score alone. Say each name out loud, check whether people can spell it after hearing it once, compare domain and marketplace options, look for unwanted associations, and ask which name best fits the product you want to build over the next few years. If two names remain close, choose the one that is easier to explain, easier to remember, and less likely to limit future positioning.
What should I do before launching with a name?
Shortlist the strongest names, verify domains with a registrar, search official app marketplaces, run trademark and company registry checks, and consult qualified professionals when the brand decision is important.
Ready to test brand name ideas?
Generate names, preview validation results, and unlock a full report when you find options worth reviewing.