FableJar creates personalized bedtime stories where your children learn to share, cooperate, and appreciate each other — through adventures where being a team is the only way to win. No lectures. No refereeing. Just stories that quietly change how they see each other.
No credit card required. Your first story is free.
“She took my toy.” “He hit me first.” “That's not fair — she got more.” “I was sitting there.” “He's looking at me.”
It starts before breakfast and it doesn't stop until they're asleep. Some days it feels like you spend more time refereeing than parenting. You separate them. You explain why sharing matters. You ask them to be kind. You lose your patience. You feel guilty for losing your patience. And tomorrow, it starts again.
You've tried everything. Taking turns. Timers. Separate rooms. Consequences. “You need to share.” “Be nice to your sister.” “How would you feel if someone did that to you?” They nod. And ten minutes later, someone's crying again.
Because the problem isn't that your children don't understand sharing. It's that they see each other as competition. Competition for your attention, for toys, for who gets more, for who goes first. And no instruction changes that lens. But a story can.
When siblings see themselves as teammates in a story — solving a problem together, helping each other, and winning because they cooperated — something shifts. They start to see their brother or sister differently. Not as the person who takes their stuff. As the person who helped them find the treasure.
See how personalized stories help children rehearse difficult situations — before they happen.
A short walkthrough of creating a story that turns sibling rivals into teammates is on its way.
Instead of telling your kids to get along, give them stories where they already are — working together, helping each other, and discovering that being a team feels better than being right.
Your daughter keeps taking toys from her younger brother and saying “it's mine.” You open FableJar:
“My daughter and her younger brother fight over toys constantly. She takes things from him and won't share. Create a story where she discovers that sharing something she loves with her brother leads to them playing together and having more fun than she would have had alone.”
FableJar creates a story where your daughter has something special, her brother wants to join, she hesitates — but then shares, and they end up building something amazing together that neither could have done alone. She's not told to share. She experiences what sharing feels like when it goes right.
Your son screams every time he doesn't get what his sister has:
“My son gets upset when his older sister has something he doesn't. He cries and says it's not fair. Create a story where he learns that different doesn't mean unfair — he has his own special things too, and when he stops comparing, he realises he already has enough.”
A story where they're both heroes:
“Create a story where both my children go on an adventure together. They start arguing over who gets to lead, but then realise that the only way to solve the puzzle is to combine what they're each good at. She's creative. He's brave. Together, they're unstoppable.”
Your children have now heard three stories where cooperation felt good. Where sharing led to more fun. Where different doesn't mean unfair. Where working together made them heroes. Saturday morning, the fight over the toy still starts. But this time, your daughter pauses. Looks at her brother. And says, “You can have it first. I'll go after.” It's small. But it's the first time she's done it without being told. Because in her story, she already tried it. And it felt good.
One story shows them what teamwork feels like. Two stories make it familiar. Three stories start to rewire how they see each other. Not as competition. As partners.
Every story features your child's name, their avatar in the illustrations, and the exact dynamic they're experiencing at home.
Aria had built the most magnificent castle in the living room. Pillows for walls, blankets for towers, and her favourite teddy standing guard at the gate. It was perfect. And it was hers. Then her little brother Rohan toddled over with his toy dinosaur. “I play too?” he said, looking up at her with those big brown eyes. Aria's first thought was no. But then she remembered what the Story Keeper had whispered to her the night before: “The best kingdoms aren't the ones you build alone. They're the ones you build with someone who thinks your castle is the most amazing thing they've ever seen.” Aria looked at Rohan. He was already staring at the blanket towers like they were real. She sighed. Then smiled. “Okay. But the dinosaur has to be friendly.”
Create a personalized story in under 60 seconds.
Add each child's name, age, interests, and personality. On the Family plan, you can have up to 5 profiles — so every sibling gets their own stories.
Pick “Sibling rivalry” or type the exact situation — fighting over toys, “it's not fair,” jealousy, refusing to share, competing for attention. Be specific.
In seconds, your child has a story where they and their sibling become a team. Read it at bedtime — or read it to both kids together.
Built for parents. Designed for children. Safe by default.
Upload a photo — FableJar creates a storybook character that looks like your child. Consistent across every story.
Grandma, Dad, an uncle — anyone can record 30 seconds and their voice narrates the story. Even from another country.
Add your child's real friends as characters. Their name, avatar, and personality — woven into shared adventures.
Adapted for children with ADHD, autism, anxiety, and sensory needs. Adjustable pacing and emotional scaffolding.
Every story is saved. A growing library of your child's adventures — a record of their journey and growth.
Stories in English, Spanish, French, German, Hindi, Japanese, Chinese, Portuguese, and Arabic.
“My two girls fight constantly. After a week of FableJar stories where they were a team solving problems together, my older daughter said to her sister — unprompted — ‘let's do it together.' I nearly dropped my coffee.”
“The ‘it's not fair' stopped after the story where my son realised different doesn't mean unfair. He now says ‘we have different things and that's okay.' He's five. He got it from a bedtime story. I couldn't teach him that in two years of trying.”
“I read the sibling story to both kids at the same time. They were both in it — as co-heroes. My son looked at his sister and said ‘we're like the adventure team.' That night, they played together for an hour without fighting. First time in months.”
Create a personalized story where your children discover that working together is more fun than fighting. Free. In under 60 seconds.
Takes under 60 seconds. No payment needed.