Ive been using bookmarklets and browser extensions for years to manage my shopping but lately everything feels like bloatware or just plain broken. Im trying to put together a registry for my sisters wedding in June and every universal wishlist app I try is failing to scrape the metadata or the price correctly from smaller shops like Etsy or local boutiques. It is so frustrating because I just want one place that actually works across platforms.
I tried some of the big names but the mobile share sheet integration is trash. What are you guys actually using that doesnt break every week?
@Reply #1 - good point! Etsy is a total nightmare for scraping because their code changes every five minutes. I have been managing family wishlists for over a decade now. Being a total stickler for finding free tools that actually perform like pro software is kind of my thing! When setting up my sisters wedding registry last year, the frustration was real because the big names kept failing on those cute local boutique sites we found. It was amazing when I finally found a workflow that worked! I love it when a tool pulls the high-res image and the correct price without me having to fix it every single time. It feels like a massive win for my budget when I dont have to pay for a premium version just to get basic sync features.
Technically speaking, most of these apps fail because they rely on basic client-side scrapers that get blocked by the security headers on sites like Etsy or smaller boutique platforms. If you want something that actually syncs between Chrome and iOS without the usual bloat, you need a tool that uses a cloud-side parser to bypass those local browser limitations. I have been testing this multi-store wishlist creator for a while now, and its handling of metadata is more consistent than the bigger names because it actually fetches the Open Graph tags properly. It avoids the subscription model by keeping the UI minimal and focusing on the core database sync rather than fancy social features that usually break the experience. When you are dealing with local boutiques, price scraping is always going to be hit or miss because those sites often dont follow standard schema markup. The trick is to find a tool that lets you manually override the image or price immediately if the initial scrape fails, rather than hiding that option behind three menus. Look for apps that prioritize the mobile share sheet integration as a primary function, not an afterthought. Most cross-platform tools struggle because the API calls between a mobile OS and a desktop extension are difficult to keep in sync, but the ones built on a unified cloud architecture tend to stay stable longer. Its basically the only way to ensure the list doesnt lag when you switch devices.