Why WeChat Moments posts are hard to write

WeChat Moments posts are short, personal, and context-heavy. A good post often depends on a photo, a small joke, a location, or one sentence a friend said. Generic AI output misses those details, so it sounds polished but empty.

QClaw can help when you treat it as a draft assistant. It runs on the desktop side, while you send prompts through WeChat. You still need to check facts, privacy, tone, and whether the post sounds like you.

A basic AI prompt for WeChat posts

Write a WeChat Moments post for me. Scene: [describe the photo or event] Mood: [relaxed / tired but happy / a little funny / grateful] Tone: natural, like talking to friends Length: under 80 words Avoid: big slogans, forced inspiration, and generic AI phrases Add: one visible detail from the photo

Prompt templates by scene

Travel photo

Write a WeChat Moments caption for a travel photo. Place: [city or spot] Photo detail: [weather / street / food / view / small accident] Mood: [excited / calm / slightly tired] Style: conversational, with one small concrete detail. Do not sound like a tourism brochure.

Daily life

Write a short WeChat Moments post for a normal day. What happened: [short description] Tiny detail: [coffee taste / elevator moment / weather / a friend's line] Tone: casual, not too perfect, maybe a little self-deprecating Length: 40-60 words

Product sharing

Write a WeChat Moments post for sharing something I like. Item: [product or service] What I actually liked: [one real experience] Not perfect: [optional] Tone: like recommending it to a friend, not like an ad. Do not promise results.

Work update

Write a WeChat Moments post about a workday. What I worked on: [brief description] Funniest or most annoying moment: [detail] Tone: honest and light. Do not turn it into motivational content.

Before and after example

Too generic: Today I felt the beauty of life and learned that every step matters. Keep going and the future will be bright.

More natural: Walked 12,000 steps today and pretended I was totally fine. The sunset helped. My knees may disagree tomorrow.

The second version works better because it has a real body feeling, a visible scene, and a small joke. It does not try to explain the meaning of life in one caption.

Manual check before posting

Read the draft once and ask three questions: Does this sound like something I would say? Is there at least one detail from the photo? Did I accidentally include private information about someone else?

If the answer is unclear, edit the post before publishing. QClaw can help with drafting, but WeChat Moments are personal. The final voice should still be yours.

Want to draft posts from WeChat?

Start from the QClaw download guide, bind WeChat, then send a short prompt to create a draft.

View QClaw download guide →