Overview
Quorina is a free generative AI tools suite that lets anyone with a Cardano wallet create text-to-speech audio without signing up for an account. Connect a supported wallet, get 50 starter credits, and pick from six voices to turn typed text into a downloadable audio file. The site is positioned as a proof of concept for a wider AI toolset, with image, music, video, animation, and text generators advertised as "Coming" alongside the live text-to-speech feature1.
Quorina is built by PHRCK (also known as Staking Rocks!), a Philippine-based Cardano stake pool, alongside NECTO Earth Node. The team frames Quorina as one of several utilities they maintain for the Cardano community.
Key Features
- Type a sentence, get spoken audio. The live text-to-speech tool turns typed text into a downloadable audio file, with six voice options named Alloy, Echo, Fable, Onyx, Nova, and Shimmer2.
- Wallet login, no signup required. Users connect a supported Cardano wallet — Typhon, Eternl, Nami, Flint, or Gero — to log in. There is no email or password to manage2.
- Fifty free credits on signup. Every new wallet that logs in receives 50 usage credits, which can be spent on the text-to-speech tool. There is no on-chain payment flow; the credits are all that's offered to new wallets1.
- Built by an active stake pool team. PHRCK has run a Cardano stake pool since 2020 and ships related tools including Detokenizer, the Bulk Sender, and the Finitum BSC-Cardano bridge3.
- Honest about scope. Most of the listed tools carry a "Coming" label, so visitors know upfront that the suite is a work in progress rather than a finished product1.
What to Expect
Visiting Quorina, you land on a dark-themed homepage that lists six AI tools as cards. Only the text-to-speech card is clickable through to a working tool — the other five (image, music, video, animator, text) lead to placeholder pages. Clicking through to text-to-speech prompts a wallet connection. After the wallet pop-up, you can type a passage of text, pick one of six voices, and hit Process to generate audio.
The tool is best suited to short-form audio jobs: voiceovers for a social clip, a draft narration for a video, or accessibility audio for a blog post. There is no project token, no on-chain payment, and no public roadmap document. People weighing whether to depend on Quorina for ongoing work should treat it as an experimental utility from a stake-pool side project rather than a commercial service. The team's parent operation, Staking Rocks!, has a longer track record of shipping community tools, which is the main signal of follow-through here3.
