๐ฉป AI Story Autopsy
Your story didn't just fail โ it died. Let us file the official report.
โก 2 credits per full autopsy report
What Is an AI Story Autopsy?
Unlike a standard story critique, the AI Story Autopsy treats your writing as a crime scene. Using pattern analysis across narrative structure, character motivation, and prose style, the examiner files an official forensic report: cause of death, time of death, diagnosed symptoms, and a revival prescription. It's the most brutally honest โ and funniest โ feedback you'll get on your writing.
Why "Autopsy" Format Works
The medical report framing does something pure critique can't: it depersonalises the failure. When the AI declares "Cause of Death: protagonist had no goals beyond being mysteriously brooding", it lands as comedy, not cruelty. This makes the feedback easier to absorb โ and infinitely more shareable.
Common Causes of Death the Autopsy Finds
- Protagonist Void Syndrome: A main character defined entirely by appearance and tragic backstory, with zero agency.
- Chronic Adverb Poisoning: Death by "she said, breathlessly" repeated forty-seven times.
- Opening Scene Necrosis: The story was dead before it began โ killed by a weather description or alarm clock.
Explore More AI Writing Tools
- Want a quicker verdict? Try the AI Story Roast for a fast savage critique.
- Need a fresh story after the autopsy? Use our AI Story Generator.
- See the full AI writing toolkit on our home page.
Frequently Asked Questions
A forensic-style AI analysis of your writing. It diagnoses the exact reasons your story failed and presents findings in a shareable medical report format โ complete with cause of death, symptoms, and prescriptions.
The Roast is a sharp one-shot critique. The Autopsy is a full structured report with multiple diagnostic sections โ deeper, more detailed, and formatted for maximum shareability.
Yes. Each autopsy costs 2 daily points. You receive 12 points per day, resetting every 24 hours โ giving you up to 6 full autopsies per day.
Absolutely. Essays, blog posts, and academic writing are particularly susceptible to Chronic Jargon Overload and Abstract Argument Collapse โ both well-documented causes of death.