Shopiflame started because I spent two years buying "turnkey Shopify stores" on marketplaces and finding the same problems every time. Generic themes with a coat of paint. Products scraped from AliExpress. Policies copy-pasted from a free template that wouldn’t survive a PayPal dispute. And the seller had already shipped the same store to forty other buyers by the time mine arrived.
So this is the store I wished I could buy. A small catalog shipped to a small number of buyers, then retired. Five copies per niche — not a marketing gimmick, a cap I hold to because clone-flooding is what kills these stores. When a niche retires, it’s gone from the site. I don’t bring it back.
The phoenix mark is not a vibe thing. It’s a reminder: every store here was built to survive the first refund request, the first chargeback, the first 2am supplier problem. The policies are written to hold up. The transfer is the real Shopify Partner transfer, not a collaborator invite. The email flow is configured, not a placeholder. You get a working store because I would be embarrassed to ship anything less.
I run this solo. One builder, one designer, one person on support — all me. That’s why delivery is capped at 48 hours and niche copies are capped at five: the math has to work for one person doing careful work, not a farm doing sloppy work at scale. If you buy a Shopiflame store, you’re buying my time, once, and then you own the thing.
If that’s the shop you wanted to find, welcome. If you wanted a clone farm, there are plenty — this isn’t one.
Questions? hello@shopiflame.com · 48-hour response.