Final Verdict
0/100
A Neapolitan souvenir shop that somehow convinced itself that printing a QR code on a fridge magnet constitutes a 'world-first patented innovation' worthy of an 8€ price tag.
Impression
45
The site looks like a generic Shopify clone that Mutart Agency 'developed with ❤️' (and likely a Bootstrap starter kit). It's a grid of 20+ repetitive 'Crea adesso' buttons that makes me feel like I'm trapped in a digital version of a Naples tourist trap.
Souvenir shop template aesthetic
Performance
55
You're loading high-res shots of 'Piazza del Plebiscito' and 'Castel dell'Ovo' just to sell a redirect link. The '8 minutes' to print in-store is probably faster than the time it takes for your 'web app' to process a 4K video upload on a tourist's data plan.
Heavy image-to-value ratio
SEO
48
Your title tag 'mycitycode: Vivi l'innovazione del Souvenir' is trying so hard to sound disruptive for a product that is literally just a 2D barcode. The meta description is a wall of text that reads like a patent application for a paperclip.
Redundant Title Tag
Copywriting
30
Calling a QR code a 'calamita digitale' (digital magnet) is like calling a billboard a 'static cinematic experience.' Phrases like 'Vivi l'innovazione' (Live the innovation) are doing some heavy lifting for a tech stack that peaked in 2011.
Hyperbolic 'Innovation' claims
Trust
62
You claim 'Prodotto brevettato' (Patented product) for a magnet with a URL on it. Unless you've patented the laws of physics or the concept of sticking things to metal, I’m calling a major bluff on your intellectual property.
Patented QR code? Really?