Writing & Copy
20 prompts

One Line About Your Day, as a Novel's First Sentence (in 3 Genres)
Turns a plain line like 'had ramen after work' into a gorgeous opening sentence in three genres — noir, romance, sci-fi — with a note on why each works.

A Vanity Detox That Removes Only the Try-Hard Parts
Picks out only the show-off phrasing, buzzwords, and needlessly complex sentences in your text, explains why each is vanity, and offers a plainer fix. Strict but kind at the end.

The Red-Pen Teacher Who Doesn't Go Easy
Line-by-line red-pen edits with a straight face — no mercy, but it roasts the sentence, never you. Ends by saving your single best line.

Strip the AI Tone, Add a Human Voice
Rewrites obviously AI-sounding text to read like a person wrote it — varied rhythm, no filler clichés, real detail — and shows what it changed and why.

Rewrite the Same Text for Different Readers
Rewrites the same content for 3 reader types (expert, beginner, busy decision-maker) and shows what it changed and why.

Give Flat Writing Sensory Detail
Rewrites a flat "it was nice / it was good" sentence into one that shows, with sensory detail, so the reader is right there — with before/after and which senses were added and why.

Say the Awkward Thing Politely — Decline, Apologize, Nudge (3 Versions)
Drafts an awkward message (decline/apology/nudge) in 3 versions — soft, balanced, firm — with a cushion→point→close structure and phrases to avoid.

Explain the Hard Thing with 3 Analogies That Actually Land
Explains a tough concept with 3 analogies from different domains — why each fits, and crucially where each one breaks down (its limit).

Turn Plain Experience into Resume-Ready Achievement Lines
Turns "I just worked hard" into achievement bullets a recruiter stops on — action-method-result structure, no inflation, with a confidence tag on each claim.

Cut Bloated Writing in Half — A Sentence Diet Clinic
Keeps the meaning, strips only the padding to make sentences lean — shows what it cut and why, by type, and trims to your target length.

Turn a Long Post into a Scroll-Stopping Thread
Recuts your long text into a serialized social thread — hook to save-worthy close — with a short note on why each post was cut where it was.

Same Message, Rewritten in Three Persuasion Angles
Takes one line of message and rewrites it in three angles — logic, emotion, social proof — then guides which angle fits which situation.

Your 30-Second Intro — Three Elevator Pitches
Give what you do, who you're talking to, and one strength, and get a 30-second self-intro in three versions — story, numbers, empathy — with memory cues and breath marks.

10 Click-Worthy Titles — With the Reason Each One Pulls
Give one line of topic and get 10 titles across different psychological triggers, each with the reason it pulls a click — plus a warning on clickbait risk.

One Line About You or Your Brand — in Every Mood
Turns your bio, profile, or slogan into one line across five moods — plain, witty, warm, professional, contrarian — sized to fit, each with its reasoning.

Six Name Candidates, Each with Its Concept and Reasoning
When naming a brand, product, or project stalls you, get six candidates in six different directions — each with concept, pronunciation, scalability reasoning, and a star rating (plus a domain/handle check tip).

Turn a Flat Fact into a Story Worth Reading
Rewrites a dry "this happened" into a short episode with a real arc — for social, an intro, or a talk opener — in a short and a long version, plus why it works.

The Scroll-Stopping First Line — 3 Hook Variations
Give it one line about what you're promoting, and it writes a scroll-stopping opening line in three angles — benefit, empathy, curiosity — each with why it works and a pull-gauge.

Revive a Flat Sentence — A Copy-Editing Clinic
Paste a flat or awkward sentence and it rewrites it in 3 living versions — keeping the meaning — with red-pen notes on what it changed and why.

A Full Set of Sales Copy — From Headline to CTA
Give it a few lines about your product and it builds a ready-to-use set of copy — headlines, body, benefit bullets, a trust line, and CTAs — on proven PAS/AIDA structure, with notes on why.