Tool Wars

She Changed My RSVP to Yes

I marked maybe on the invite... then my friend changed it to yes.

Fictional case Interactive webtoon 8 panels

This is an original fictional interactive webtoon case about tool wars. Read the story, inspect the details, pick a side, and see the split.

Ava and Zoey stand in a generic apartment living room beside blank invitation cards, snacks, and party supplies.
The invite looked simple.

One birthday night. One group headcount.

Gut pick

Pick your first lean.

One tap now. You can flip after the story.

Optional. Final pick comes later.
Tension meter
Gut check
Panel 1 / 8
Ask firststory pull
Count the maybestory pull
Set rulesstory pull

First take: No first take yet. Story pressure only.

Receipt layer
3 receipts waiting.
Zoey checks a phone with the screen facing her while Ava packs a tote behind a kitchen island with blank place cards.
Zoey had shared calendar access.

It was supposed to help with rides and plans.

Ava stands in a generic apartment hallway holding a phone with the screen facing her beside a blank wall calendar.
Ava left it as maybe.

She was waiting on one late shift.

Zoey sits at a generic apartment dining table with an angled laptop, face-down phone, blank headcount cards, and party supplies.
Zoey changed it to yes.

The headcount suddenly looked finished.

A generic apartment table shows a face-down phone, partly closed laptop, blank invitation card, empty place cards, snacks, pen, and unmarked calendar page.
The access was real. So was the headcount.

That is where the group split.

Ava and Zoey face each other in a generic apartment living room beside blank place cards and snacks.
Ava found out after the count went out.

Zoey said she was helping.

Ava, Zoey, and four friends stand around a generic apartment coffee table with the group visibly split into three opinions.
The room split three ways.

Ask first. Count the maybe. Set access rules.

Ava stands alone in a quiet generic apartment living room with a face-down phone, blank invite card, and blank place cards on the table.
Is access the same as permission?

Pick your side before the split.

Evidence

Check the details.

The access

Ava had shared calendar access with Zoey for rides and group logistics.

The maybe

Ava left the birthday invite as maybe while waiting to confirm a late shift.

The change

Zoey changed Ava's RSVP to yes so the host could lock the headcount.

Pick your side

Was changing the RSVP out of line, practical, or a sign they need access rules?

Three takes enter the chat.Claim a lane before the split shows.
Three takes are live. Tap a lane.
Open the receipts
  1. The invite looked simple.
    Ava and Zoey were helping plan a small game night for a friend's birthday.
  2. Zoey had shared calendar access.
    Ava had given Zoey calendar access months ago so they could coordinate group plans more easily.
    You said probably, right?
    You said probably, right?
  3. Ava left it as maybe.
    Ava wanted to go, but she needed to confirm whether her late shift would end in time.
  4. Zoey changed it to yes.
    Zoey thought Ava was basically coming and changed the RSVP so the host could plan the game teams.
  5. The access was real. So was the headcount.
    Zoey had access because Ava trusted her with logistics. The host also needed a clear number before setting up the night.
  6. Ava found out after the count went out.
    Ava felt like her friend had answered for her. Zoey felt like she had only confirmed what Ava already implied.
    You answered for me.
    I was saving the headcount.
    You answered for me. / I was saving the headcount.
  7. The room split three ways.
    Some friends said Zoey should have asked. Some said Ava's maybe was holding up the plan. Others said shared access needed boundaries.
  8. Is access the same as permission?
    Shared tools can make planning easier, but they can also blur who gets to answer for whom.
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