An editor's desk for over-thinkers

Three drafts.
One winner.
One final.

You wrote it three times. Each version has a phrase you love, a structure you hate, a tone almost right. DraftMerge reads them all and gives you back a single, honest version with the best of each — in seconds, not minutes.

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tighten this
much better
re: Q3 priorities
3 versions · merged
i.
Hi team — wanted to circle back about share thoughts on Q3. We should prioritize user feedback, especially on onboarding.
v1
ii.
Hey everyone, regarding Q3 — I think the analytics dashboard needs to ship first, then we can revisit feedback.
v2
iii.
Team, for Q3 we'll need to balance both, but timeline is tight. Let's discuss prioritization in our sync.
v3
↓ merged
final Hi team — wanted to share my thinking on Q3. The analytics dashboard should ship first, with onboarding feedback close behind. Timeline is tight, so let's lock priorities in Tuesday's sync.
3 sources · 1 result — 1 credit · 1.4s
01 — The mess

You've been editing the same paragraph for twelve minutes.

Every writer keeps a graveyard of half-written drafts. The good lines are scattered. The merge happens in your head, badly.

i.

Three tabs, three drafts

You wrote it once. Then again. Then again. Now you're shuffling between them looking for that one phrase that worked.

ii.

Manual stitching

Copy from v2. Paste in v1. Tweak the tone. Realize v3 had the better ending. Start over. Lose the original idea.

iii.

A 30-second message

What should take a minute now eats a quarter of your morning. The send button feels harder than the writing.

02 — The method

Three steps. No learning curve.

Paste, configure, merge. Then copy and send. The whole workflow fits on one screen.

i.

Paste your drafts

Two or twenty — whatever you've got. Set the tone, length, and platform you're writing for.

ii.

We read them

Claude looks at all versions, identifies what's unique, what's strong, what each draft contributes.

iii.

One clean draft

Get a single version that captures every important point. Need it shorter? Compress to any character count.

03 — The toolkit

Built like a copy editor — only faster.

Every feature exists because a writer asked for it. No bloat, no AI gimmicks, no marketing language masquerading as features.

no. 01

Side-by-side analysis

See what's unique in each version, what's redundant, what tone shifts between drafts. Not just a black box — you understand the merge.

no. 02

Tone & length controls

Formal, casual, balanced. Concise, detailed, or somewhere in between. Set the lens before merging — not after.

no. 03

Platform-aware output

Email, tweet, LinkedIn post, blog draft, Slack message. The model knows what each format expects.

no. 04

Character compression

Need to fit 280? Or 500? Compress the merged result down to any limit while keeping the core argument intact.

no. 05

Unlimited drafts

Add as many versions as you like. The more you give it, the better the merge. No arbitrary caps.

no. 06

Private by default

Your drafts aren't training data. Nothing is stored on our servers after the request completes.

04 — In the wild

For anyone who writes things twice.

Founders, marketers, editors, students, the chronically Slack-anxious.

Email

The difficult message

The one you've been drafting since Tuesday. Three versions of "I'm sorry, but —". Merge them and send.

"Saved me from sending the worst version on a bad-sleep morning."
Social

Tweets & posts

Variations on a hook. Different angles for the same announcement. Find the version that lands.

"My LinkedIn engagement is up because I stopped settling for v1."
Marketing

Ad copy & landing

The product description you've A/B-tested in your head. Combine the best halves into one launch line.

"Replaced my 'three docs of variants' workflow entirely."
Career

Cover letters

Three drafts: one too cocky, one too humble, one boring. Merge into the version you'd actually send.

"Got an interview from a job I'd been overthinking for a week."
Writing

Blog & long-form

Two intros, three conclusions. Pick the strongest threads and weave them into a clean draft.

"My first drafts have a final-draft feel now."
Internal

Slack & messages

The reply you've been rewriting in your head. Type both versions, hit merge, send the better one.

"This is therapy for over-thinkers."
05 — The terms

Pay for what you use. Nothing more.

No subscription, no minimums, no auto-renew you forgot about. One credit per merge or compress. Credits never expire.

Start free with 250 credits (10,000 words) on signup
→ 1 credit = 200 characters. No card required.
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  • All 10 platforms, 6 use cases
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7,500 credits · Save 17%
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