Reddit posts that actually
get read
Rewrite your Reddit post to follow each subreddit's rules, format requirements, and top-performing patterns so it lands instead of getting removed.
Built for genuine posts only. Promotional content, product pitches, and affiliate links are automatically blocked before they reach Reddit — because posts that read like ads get removed by moderators within hours anyway.
No draft needed
See what Reddit is already talking about. Add your take. Get a post.
You pick a topic that's already getting traction in your niche, write one sentence of your honest opinion, and we turn it into a complete Reddit post — formatted for that specific community.
Pick topics you care about
Choose up to 4 areas — Finance, Gaming, Fitness, etc. We scan real Reddit activity in each one and pull what's actually getting engagement today. Not yesterday. Today.
Write one sentence — your take
Pick a discussion that interests you and type your honest angle. You don't need a full draft. A single sentence like "I think this is massively overrated" is enough to start.
Get a full post, formatted for that subreddit
We expand your take into a complete Reddit post — matched to the tone, length, and style of the specific subreddit. Copy it and post. That's the whole thing.
Available niches
You don't need a blank page to start.
Pick a topic that's already working on Reddit. Write one sentence. We handle the rest — structure, tone, length, all matched to the subreddit.
See what's trending nowSee the difference
Before and after
Same story, different structure. Pick a subreddit to see how the rewrite changes.
Original draft
Founder here. I left a comfortable data scientist job to build a SaaS in the sports betting space. At the time it felt rational. I knew data. I knew modeling. I was personally obsessed with the problem. I figured if I built something genuinely useful, users would eventually find it. That was the naive part. The sports betting analytics space is incredibly saturated. Every week there's another picks tool, odds screen, EV scanner, Discord, model, or "AI betting assistant." Even when the product is useful, it's hard to get people to care because they've already seen a hundred things that sound similar. The hard lesson for me has been that personal conviction is not the same as demand. I cared about the idea so much that I put my own interest ahead of market proof. I spent too much time building and not enough time figuring out whether there was a specific wedge people would switch for. Growth has been painfully slow. Not zero, but slow enough that it forced me to be honest: maybe the problem isn't the model, the UI, or the next feature. Maybe I haven't found the sharpest pain yet. So now I'm changing how I approach it. Before building more, I'm trying to validate smaller ideas first: find the exact person with the pain understand what they already pay for see what they distrust about existing tools test whether the promise is strong enough before writing code It's uncomfortable because building feels productive. Validation feels slower and messier. But I'm starting to think the messy part is the actual company-building part. Curious how others here handle this: when you're technical and genuinely interested in the product area, how do you stop yourself from overbuilding before you've proven the wedge?
After RedditRabbit
I left a data scientist job to build a SaaS in the sports betting analytics space. I knew the domain. I was obsessed with the problem. I assumed that if I built something genuinely useful, users would find it. That was the naive part. The sports betting analytics space is saturated in a specific way — not overcrowded with good products, but overcrowded with things that sound the same. Every week there's another picks tool, odds screen, EV scanner, or "AI betting assistant." Even when the product is useful, it's hard to get anyone to care because they've already seen a hundred things that sound similar and don't work. The hard lesson: personal conviction is not the same as demand. I cared about the idea so much that I put my own interest ahead of market proof. Too much time building, not enough time figuring out whether there was a specific wedge people would actually switch for. Growth has been slow. Not zero — but slow enough to force some honesty. Maybe the problem isn't the model, the UI, or the next feature. Maybe I just haven't found the sharpest pain yet. So I'm changing the approach. Before building more, I'm trying to validate smaller ideas first: - Find the exact person with the pain - Understand what they already pay for - See what they distrust about existing tools - Test whether the promise is strong enough before writing a line of code Building feels productive. Validation feels slower and messier. But I'm starting to think the messy part is the actual company-building part — I just didn't know that when I quit. Curious how others handle this: when you're technical and genuinely interested in the space, how do you stop yourself from overbuilding before you've proven the wedge?
What changed and why
1.Removed 'Founder here.' — r/SaaS readers are all founders. The label adds nothing and signals you're still in announcement mode rather than discussion mode.
2.Tightened the saturation paragraph. The original had two consecutive sentences making the same point ('hard to get people to care' + 'they've already seen a hundred things'). Merged into one that carries both ideas.
3.Formatted the validation steps as a proper list. They were buried as running prose, which made each step hard to register individually. Bullet format gives each one weight.
4.Added 'I just didn't know that when I quit' to the closing line. The original ended cleanly but without the personal cost. That detail is what makes r/SaaS readers engage — it shows the stakes were real.
The process
How it works
Paste your draft
Drop your Reddit post into the editor — any length, any topic. We check it for promotional content before anything else, because posts that read like ads get removed before anyone sees them.
Pick the subreddit
Search for the community you're posting to. We look up its rules, banned words, flair requirements, and how the posts that actually get traction in that sub are written.
Get the rewrite and post
A rewritten version of your post, formatted for that subreddit. Every change shown side by side with a plain-English reason. Three title options. A checklist of what AutoMod would catch. Copy it and go.
Don't waste the post
Most Reddit posts get zero upvotes.
Yours doesn't have to.
The idea usually isn't the problem. The format is. Paste your draft and see exactly what to change for your subreddit — in under a minute.
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