He Used AI to Write a Love Letter
He gave her a handwritten love letter. Then she found the AI draft behind it.
This is an original fictional interactive webtoon case about love & chaos. Read the story, inspect the details, pick a side, and see the split.
Not a text. Not a card. A whole handwritten letter.
Pick your first lean.
One tap now. You can flip after the story.
First take: No first take yet. Story pressure only.
The burnt pancakes. The bus stop rain. The song he pretends to hate.
The tab was still open.
So was the polished version he copied by hand.
Was it his heart, or just his handwriting?
It just made them sound less clumsy.
Some cared about the memories. Some cared about the voice.
The feelings were his. The finished words were not only his.
Check the details.
The letter
The handwritten letter included private memories: the rainy bus stop, the burnt pancakes, the song Mateo pretends to hate, and the way Leila checks every locked door twice.
Draft history
The shared laptop showed Mateo had typed a messy list of memories, then asked a generic writing assistant to turn them into a romantic anniversary letter.
Mateo's explanation
Mateo says the feelings and memories were his. He used the tool because his own draft sounded stiff, and he wanted the letter to feel as big as what he meant.
Open the receipts
- He said he wrote me a letter. Mateo had always said feelings came out wrong when he tried to write them down. So when he handed me three folded pages, I thought he had done the hard thing for me.You wrote this?You wrote this?
- It knew every tiny thing. The letter mentioned the kind of memories you only notice when someone has been paying attention. By the second page, I was crying into the corner of it.
- Then the laptop woke up. I went to put on a movie and saw a draft history sitting on the shared laptop. The title was not readable, but the shape of it was enough to make my stomach drop.Wait.Wait.
- His bullet list was there. The messy notes were his. Favorite memories. Things he loved. Things he was scared to say. But the lines in the letter matched the tool-shaped draft almost exactly.
- I asked the wrong-sounding question. I did not ask whether he loved me. I asked why the most personal thing he had ever given me sounded like someone else helped him perform it.Did you write this?I made the notes.Did you write this? / I made the notes.
- He said the tool did not invent the feelings. Mateo said he wrote the memories first because he wanted the letter to be true. He used the tool because every version in his own voice sounded too small.I knew what I meant.I knew what I meant.
- The friend group split fast. One friend said Mateo used a tool the way nervous people use a thesaurus. Another said a love letter is supposed to be imperfect because the imperfection is the proof.
- So what makes it count? Leila can accept the letter as a helped expression, ask for messy words in his own voice, or decide the real issue was hiding the help in the first place.