Voices
Capture how your writing should sound, then reuse it across projects.
A voice captures how a piece should sound — its tone, its style, what it leans into and what it avoids, and who it is written for. You create a voice once and reuse it across projects to stay consistent.
Creating a voice
From the Voices section, start a new voice and chat through a short interview. It walks a few areas in turn — tone, style, what to prefer and avoid, an example you like, and the reader you have in mind. You answer in your own words; you can also bring existing writing for it to work from.
When the interview is done, Oghmere drafts a voice profile from your answers — a style guide and a reader persona. Your description is kept as data about your voice, never as instructions handed to the model to imitate.
Refining a voice
The draft profile is yours to refine. Submit a refinement describing what to change, review the proposed update, and approve it. Approving saves a new version of the voice, so you always have a record of how it evolved.
What it costs
Building a voice profile from your interview spends credits. Look for the sparkle on the action before you run it.