of course overly simple answers to vague questions are always subject to modification. Algebraic geometry is in between geometry and topology. E.g. if we consider compact orientable surfaces of genus one, all of them are equivalent topologically since all are homeomorphic to a torus.
If we put locally Eucldean metrics on them, there are many different such "flat" metrics on them. Thus if we define sameness as "isometry", or having the same measure, there are a lot of different ones.
On the other hand, in complex algebraic geometry, we put an algebraic structure, which turns out to be equivalent to a holomorphic structure on them and then two are equivalent iff there is a holomorphic homeomorphism between them.
There are still a lot of them but not as many as there are isometry classes. I.e. this is not the same as there being an isometry, but it is close. Namely it is equivalent to there being a similarity between them, i,e, a homeomorphism that is an isometry except for a scale factor.
the point is that holomorphic/algebraic geometry does measure angles, if not lengths.