On this extremely "competitive" brainpower track of online literature creation, authors have finally received their own cyber upgrade. On March 15, the writer assistant of Yuewen Group officially announced that its exclusive AI creation tool Claw has started internal testing. The emergence of this tool marks the beginning of a new stage in online literature creation, from "solo efforts" to "human-machine co-creation."

Different from general AI tools that only write official documents, Claw is completely tailored for the "pain points" of online literature writers. The current internal testing version already includes three core features: Hot topic material collection, Three Rivers recommendation appreciation, and Plot comment analysis. This means that authors no longer need to manually search through the vast review areas for reader feedback. The AI can directly help you analyze which parts of the plot were most praised and which parts led to negative reviews.

In terms of interaction, Claw is very down-to-earth. It supports one-click deployment on desktop computers, allowing direct conversation and even integrating with QQ chat capabilities. Authors just need to set up a QQ robot, and they can use AI skills by issuing commands as if chatting with an old friend. In the future, it plans to launch functions such as similar work search, reader profile analysis, and even chapter image generation, covering almost the entire lifecycle of online literature production.

Regarding the safety of the manuscript, Yuewen has given peace of mind. Claw uses a local storage solution, keeping all sensitive data only on the author's own computer, and operations are strictly limited within designated files.

Although Claw is still in its early stages, this attempt to deeply integrate AI into the creative process undoubtedly provides a new idea for authors experiencing "writer's block" anxiety. When AI learns to analyze reader profiles and hot topics, the future online literature world may indeed see more super writers who can write ten thousand words a day.