What is Inkbreaker?
An overview of the platform and what it is for.
Inkbreaker is a writing practice platform. It gives writers a place to work on their craft on purpose, with objective feedback, a record of how they improve over time, and a community of other writers doing the same work.
The core idea is straightforward. Writing improves when you practice it with feedback that tells you something specific. That is what Inkbreaker is built around. You put words down, you see what the numbers say about the prose, and you write again. There are no AI suggestions, no grammar correction, and no vague encouragement standing in for that.
What you can do here
The editor and notebook are free. Open a draft, write, and keep your work in one place.
Exercises are structured writing prompts built to train specific skills. Each one is tagged to one or more craft skills: dialogue, pacing, clarity, compression, and others. When you submit an exercise, the prose engine grades your work against benchmarks for your writing type and shows you exactly where you landed.
The prose analysis engine scores every submission. It uses published readability formulas: Flesch-Kincaid, Gunning Fog, Coleman-Liau, and Brysbaert's reading research. No language models. No generated feedback. The same text always produces the same scores. There is a full walkthrough in How the engine works.
Your Report Card tracks your skill progression over time: XP, levels, submission history, and your skill map.
The community feed is where writers publish finished work, follow each other, and leave feedback. Peer feedback is matched by skill focus. When you request a read, we pair you with a writer whose focus fits your piece.
What Inkbreaker is not
It is not a grammar checker. It does not correct your writing. It measures specific craft dimensions and shows you where you stand against benchmarks for your writing type.
It is not an AI writing tool. The engine is deterministic, end to end. No language models are involved in grading, in feedback, or in the exercise prompts. The one place a classification model touches the product is content moderation, which never looks at your writing for quality.
If you want the short version: Inkbreaker measures your prose, tracks your practice, and connects you with other writers who will read your work closely.
Still stuck? Head back to Support to report a bug or reach the team.