Smut, written properly
Smut, written for readers
Most "smut generators" are chatbots in lingerie — they hand you the act and call it a story. We started somewhere else. We started with the people.
Tell us who they are: what she wants but won't say, what he's been trying not to do, how long they've been circling each other. The smut comes after, the way it does in real fiction — earned, written in proper prose, paced across chapters that build into something instead of skipping to the end. Heat that means something stays with you longer than heat that doesn't. She remembers what you wrote last time.
Start from one of these
“My new boss asked me to stay late. The office is empty. He just closed the door and said it wasn't about work.”
Slow build, charged office →
“Late flight. Same hotel. He's your ex-boyfriend's best friend — and the only one who offered to drive you from the airport.”
Wrong friend, late hotel →
“I'm back in my hometown for the first time in five years. He's still working at the same bar. He looked up when the door opened.”
Old want, new chance →
What a smut story should actually do
Build a reason. The act without the want is empty. Every chapter earns the next one.
Stay in the room. Sensory detail, real voice, characters who don't turn into chatbots when the temperature rises.
Remember everything. What was said, what was worn, what was promised. When you come back, the character comes back with all of it.
Common questions
How is this different from Janitor.AI or CrushOn?
They optimize for immediacy — fast chat, quick replies. We optimize for earned payoff. Chapter pacing, real prose, characters that remember.
Is everything fully unfiltered?
On adult fiction between consenting adult characters, yes — no filters, no mid-session refusals. Editorial guardrails (no minors, no real people) stay in place.
Do the characters carry between stories?
Yes. Save any character from any story and they're yours — they remember every page you wrote together, and they show up in new stories with all of it.