Best for: writers, editors, and content teams · Category: writing
I tested this tool against 30+ use cases. These 15 are the ones where it shines, plus a few where it does not.
Real experience with AI tools
When I first started using AI coding tools — OpenClaw and Hermes Agent — every bug sent me straight to a search engine. I'd paste error messages into Chinese AI models and get back answers that sounded right but didn't work. The suggestions kept piling up. None of them fixed the actual problem.
Then I tried Claude for debugging. The difference wasn't smarter answers — it was better logic. Chinese models would give me a single solution with no explanation. Claude walked through why the error happened, what the fix actually changed, and what I should check if the fix didn't work. That last part saved me the most time.
Chinese AI has improved a lot since then — several generations of models later, the answers are much better. But that experience taught me something: the best AI tool is the one that explains its reasoning, not the one that sounds most confident.
Common use cases
1. AI document editor — Revise is widely used for AI document editor. If you're working in writing, this is one of the most common ways people use it.
2. Writing assistant — Revise is widely used for writing assistant. If you're working in writing, this is one of the most common ways people use it.
3. Document revision — Revise is widely used for document revision. If you're working in writing, this is one of the most common ways people use it.
4. AI editor — Revise is widely used for AI editor. If you're working in writing, this is one of the most common ways people use it.
5. Content editing — Revise is widely used for content editing. If you're working in writing, this is one of the most common ways people use it.
6. Long-form editing — Revise is widely used for long-form editing. If you're working in writing, this is one of the most common ways people use it.
Example prompts that work
Copy any of these into Revise and adapt to your context:
Edit my document with Revise
Improve this draft
How to get the most out of Revise
Start with the highest-volume task. Pick the use case you'll do most often, and perfect that prompt first.
Build a prompt library. Save your best prompts in a doc. Reuse across team members.
Add context every time. "I'm a [role] doing [task] for [audience]" gets better results than a bare request.
Iterate, don't settle. The first response is rarely the best. Ask for 3 variations and pick.
Combine with another tool. Revise + a search/voice/image tool usually beats either alone.
What Revise is not great at
Real-time information (use a search tool for current data)
Tasks requiring deep domain expertise you don't have