I can't really say how our search works as far as
fuzziness is concerned. Since we search multiple databases, it might need to be more exact.
There is however one certain way to find something on our site.
Find it on the sites we search and find the ID and use that instead.
For example,
for a movie (let's say "The Avengers") you would search
themoviedb.org and end up here..
https://www.themoviedb.org/movie/[b]
24428[/b]-the-avengers
Now take note of the ID and use it to craft a URL on our site like this
https://fanart.tv/movie/[b]
24428[/b]
Bingo!
For a TV series you would do it like this..
Search
thetvdb.com for Dr Who
http://thetvdb.com/?id=[b]
78804[/b]&tab=series
Now craft it for our site..
https://fanart.tv/series/78804
Lastly, for music
Search
musicbrainz.org for The Firm..
http://musicbrainz.org/artist/[b]
c08ced1f-d248-4368-90e5-bf579b3bf5de[/b]
and our URL
https://fanart.tv/artist/[b]
c08ced1f-d248-4368-90e5-bf579b3bf5de[/b]
Also, once you find it on the site that we actually source the information from, you can usually see if it's listed as something different than what you searched for when you couldn't find it. This isn't 100% as it may not have a dedicated "English Name" set, so it may show up on our site as no-english-title-set. This won't prevent you from uploading your images. It just means the name won't show on our site, so it's just a visual thing and won't effect media centers accessing that art via the API as that is done by ID and not names.
I hope that helps for the future.