What do you like best about GravityWrite?
To be perfectly honest, I had pretty low expectations for GravityWrite. I sort of picked it up on a lark while I was searching for a tool to clean up some A-generated text, and to tell the truth most of my interest was in seeing how many words were allowed for free. Sometimes as a student I use AI to help me get through rough drafts or brainstorm when I'm completely stuck. I wanted to look at GravityWrite to see whether it actually does have that kind of effect.
Surprisingly, it did a very good job.
Its interface immediately won me over as straightforward. No questions asked, no fuss--just a clean dashboard with labels which you can understand. Taking the AI Rewriter tool, I directly input a block of text that I had made with another AI tool, then hit the rewrite button. A new version popped out in seconds that felt smoother, flowed more naturally and had a few less artificial twists of phrase to its credit.
What I found praiseworthy and distinctive was that it didn't simply put things in other words. It had changed the sentence structure of the text, taking the "AI tone" and softening it down, so as to make the whole thing sound more like a person speaking. Mind you it's still not perfect. Sometimes it does "over" these changes a bit and loses some of its original personality. It can come out sounding a little too slick, a little too like a mail-order catalog. But when it all comes together, it really helps to give your writing that extra touch of being human.
After all, GravityWrite might be mostly about content creators and marketers, with tools for SEO, blog posts, product descriptions, or image creation. But as an student, I’ve found that it still suits my needs when confronted with course essays. At 1 a.m. I cannot think of how to start an essay, when I’ve written something that is technically correct but tastes awry like leftovers which have seen better days. I paste it into GravityWrite, pick a style, and it outputs a cleaner version that I can then adjust. Saves time, saves thinking cells. In any case, the free plan is usable. You get about 5,000 words a month, enough to do a few assignments or some random writing projects. Huge amounts of features are locked behind a paywall, and as for generating pictures with it—well I just had no use for this feature. From another standpoint, if you hope it will help you beat an AI detector like Turnitin… perhaps? Every so often it lowers AI scores, but there are no guarantees. So don’t rely on it. But if what you want is to just make your writing better--if you want to give it that human feeling, to make it flow a bit more easily and be readable--then yes, GravityWrite really has helped me a lot. It won’t replace editing, and after I still go over it to make changes. But it gives me a good place to start. On the whole, if you do a lot of writing--whatever form that takes, from school essays to content creation or even small business ventures--it's probably worth checking out. Especially for students, the free version will serve to let you see if it's useful before parting with any cash. And for me it's now just one of those programs that I always have open in a tab whenever I'm beavering away at something that needs some extra finishes. It’s not revolutionary, but it’s a good addition to the writing toolbox.
Ease of use - CHECK
Ease of implementation - CHECK
Number of Features- Check is an understatement LOL Review collected by and hosted on G2.com.