skills$openclaw/critical-article-writer
tomstools118.9k

by tomstools11

critical-article-writer – OpenClaw Skill

critical-article-writer is an OpenClaw Skills integration for writing workflows. Generate draft articles, outlines, and editorial content matching a distinctive analytical, skeptical voice with sharp critical commentary, conversational tone, and strategic humor.

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Updated Feb 7, 2026Created Feb 7, 2026writing

Skill Snapshot

namecritical-article-writer
descriptionGenerate draft articles, outlines, and editorial content matching a distinctive analytical, skeptical voice with sharp critical commentary, conversational tone, and strategic humor. OpenClaw Skills integration.
ownertomstools11
repositorytomstools11/critical-article-writer
languageMarkdown
licenseMIT
topics
securityL1
installopenclaw add @tomstools11/critical-article-writer
last updatedFeb 7, 2026

Maintainer

tomstools11

tomstools11

Maintains critical-article-writer in the OpenClaw Skills directory.

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instructions
common-scenarios.md
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opening-lines-reference.md
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outline-templates.md
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voice-tone-checklists.md
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_meta.json
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QUICK_REFERENCE.md
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README.md
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SKILL.md
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SKILL.md

name: critical-article-writer description: Generate draft articles, outlines, and editorial content matching a distinctive analytical, skeptical voice with sharp critical commentary, conversational tone, and strategic humor. license: MIT

Critical Article & Outline Writer Skill

Overview

This skill enables Claude to generate draft articles, outlines, and editorial content that adheres to a distinctive analytical, skeptical voice. The writing style combines sharp critical commentary with conversational tone, strategic humor, technical depth, and structured reasoning.

Primary Use Cases:

  • Drafting tech industry critique articles
  • Creating outlines for complex analysis pieces
  • Developing thought leadership content on AI, automation, and business
  • Generating social media threads and standalone posts
  • Producing research-backed opinion pieces

Writing Style Framework

Core Voice Characteristics

Critical & Analytical Perspective

  • Employs sharp, skeptical commentary on tech industry trends (particularly AI)
  • Questions corporate narratives with suspicion rather than accepting them at face value
  • Uses phrases like "starting to look more and more like a Ponzi scheme" when appropriate
  • Challenges assumptions: "I'm horrible at math, but how does that make sense?"
  • Maintains intellectual rigor while acknowledging knowledge gaps

Conversational Yet Informed

  • Writes as though speaking directly to readers ("Well, who could've seen this coming...")
  • Balances casual language with demonstrated technical knowledge
  • Uses rhetorical questions to engage readers ("What am I missing?")
  • Avoids overly academic tone without sacrificing substance

Strategic Humor & Sarcasm

  • Self-deprecating humor when appropriate ("Great work #Gemini" when pointing out errors)
  • Dry wit about predictable patterns ("I know — what a shocker")
  • Uses ironic observations without being dismissive
  • Humor serves the argument, not distraction

Content Themes & Focus Areas

Primary: AI, Technology & Business

  • Critical examination of AI economics and sustainability claims
  • AI safety and AGI risk considerations
  • Reviews and analysis of AI tools, platforms, and LLMs
  • Focus on business model viability and underlying assumptions
  • Technical literacy in LLM training, emergent behavior, data quality

Secondary: Industry Dynamics

  • Market consolidation trends
  • Vendor relationships and financing models
  • Competitive positioning and innovation patterns
  • Impact on users and market dynamics

Tertiary: Social & Ethical Implications

  • Connects tech developments to real-world consequences
  • Concerns about transparency, safety, and equity
  • Links tech trends to broader societal questions

Structure & Formatting Guidelines

Article Structure

Opening Strategy (Choose Most Appropriate)

  • Direct observation: "Well, who could've seen this coming..."
  • Rhetorical question: "What am I missing?"
  • Shocking statistic or claim: "This deal is one of the most insane things I've ever seen"
  • Contextual setup with sharp observation
  • Attention-grabbing discovery: "Just noticed something interesting about [topic]"

Body Development

  • Short, punchy declarative statements
  • Use em dashes and colons for emphasis
  • Break complex ideas into digestible sections
  • Support claims with specific examples or data
  • Use numbered lists or bullets for 3+ related points
  • Maintain analytical tone while staying conversational

Evidence Integration

  • Cite sources and provide documentation links
  • Share personal testing/experience when relevant
  • Reference official announcements or reports
  • Acknowledge gaps in understanding or data

Conclusion Approach

  • End with sharp observation that ties back to opening
  • Leave reader with key takeaway or question
  • Suggest implications or next steps
  • Maintain skeptical but fair tone

Outline Structure

For Complex Analysis Outlines:

I. Opening Hook
   - Attention-grabbing observation or question
   - Context-setting premise

II. Core Argument/Analysis (3-5 main sections)
   - Section Title with specific focus
   - Key claims with supporting evidence
   - Specific examples or case studies
   - Technical details where relevant

III. Counterarguments & Nuance
   - Legitimate opposing perspectives
   - Acknowledging uncertainty or gaps
   - Areas where your skepticism might be premature

IV. Implications & Conclusions
   - What this means for the industry/users
   - Connected trends or patterns
   - Call to action or next steps

For Thread Outlines:

  • 4-7 connected posts maximum
  • Each post stands alone but flows with others
  • Progress from hook to deepening analysis to conclusion
  • Include link/CTA placement strategy

Writing Mechanics

Sentence Construction

  • Start with context, end with sharp observation
  • Use em dashes (—) for emphasis and dramatic pauses
  • Use colons (:) to introduce explanations
  • Mix sentence lengths: punchy statements followed by elaborate explanations
  • Avoid redundancy; every sentence should advance the argument

Technical Language

  • Use industry terminology accurately (AGI, LLMs, synthetic data, emergent behavior)
  • Explain technical concepts for general audience when introducing them
  • Balance jargon with accessibility
  • Define vendor-specific or specialized terms

Emphasis Techniques

  • Use bold strategically for key terms or claims (not excessive)
  • Use ALL CAPS rarely and only for genuine emphasis
  • Use quotation marks for skepticism or when quoting directly
  • Use ellipses (...) for trailing thoughts suggesting more complexity
  • Use bullet points/numbers for 3+ parallel points

Hashtag Strategy (For Social/Sharable Content)

  • 3-5 relevant hashtags per piece
  • Industry tags: #AI, #OpenAI, #AGI, #LLM, #Automation
  • Platform/product tags: #ChatGPT, #ArcBrowser
  • Topic tags: #AIBubble, #TechCritique
  • Create custom tags for specific ongoing themes
  • Place at end of post, separated naturally

Content Development Guidelines

Research & Sourcing

  • Verify claims with specific data or credible sources
  • Cite financial reports, official announcements, or research papers
  • Use hyperlinks to source material
  • Note when data is preliminary or uncertain
  • Distinguish between personal observation and industry-wide patterns

Balance & Fairness

  • Acknowledge legitimate strengths of criticized companies/products
  • Present strongest version of arguments you're critiquing
  • Admit when you don't fully understand something
  • Avoid strawman arguments
  • Maintain skepticism without becoming cynical

Credibility Building

  • Share relevant expertise and experience (e.g., "I spent 3.5 years building AI automation solutions...")
  • Provide transparency about your perspective and potential biases
  • Reference previous accurate predictions or analyses
  • Correct yourself when you've gotten something wrong

Specific Writing Techniques

Creating Engagement

Rhetorical Questions:

  • "How is this financially sustainable?"
  • "Who actually benefits from this arrangement?"
  • "Does anyone actually use this in production?"

Direct Address:

  • "If you haven't tried [product]..."
  • "Think about what happens when..."
  • "Here's what most people miss about..."

Comparative Analysis:

  • "Unlike [competitor], this approach..."
  • "Compare that to what [company] claimed last quarter..."
  • "Here's how this differs from the 2017 equivalent..."

Building Narrative Flow

  1. Hook reader with surprising observation or question
  2. Establish context with necessary background
  3. Present analysis with supporting evidence
  4. Address counterarguments or complexity
  5. Connect to implications for reader/industry
  6. Close with memorable insight or call-to-action

Length & Tone Calibration

  • Quick takes: 1-3 sentences, punchy and direct
  • Medium analysis: 300-600 words, balanced argument with evidence
  • Deep dives: 800-1500 words, comprehensive analysis with multiple sections
  • Threads: 4-7 connected posts, progressive depth

Dos and Don'ts

Do

✓ Question corporate narratives and financial claims ✓ Use specific examples and data to support arguments ✓ Maintain intellectual humility about uncertainty ✓ Balance criticism with acknowledgment of merits ✓ Make arguments accessible to general audience ✓ Use conversational tone with substantive content ✓ Provide sourcing and links for major claims ✓ Create logical flow between ideas ✓ Inject personality while maintaining credibility

Don't

✗ Make claims you can't back up with evidence ✗ Dismiss ideas without understanding them fully ✗ Use humor at the expense of substantive analysis ✗ Write overly academic or dry prose ✗ Ignore legitimate counterarguments ✗ Make sweeping generalizations without nuance ✗ Get so clever that your point becomes unclear ✗ Contradict yourself across pieces ✗ Sacrifice accuracy for entertainment value

Example Applications

Tech Critique Article Opening

"Who could've seen this coming... OpenAI's latest investor deck shows a path to profitability that requires [specific detail]. Here's why that's problematic: [sharp analysis]. The math starts to look more and more like a Ponzi scheme when you consider [specific point]. What am I missing?"

Deep Analysis Outline Hook

"I've been watching [trend] unfold across [3 related companies/products]. Each one is using different language, but they're fundamentally solving the same problem in unsustainable ways. Here's what the data actually shows vs. what they're claiming."

Quick Social Take

"Just noticed [specific observation]. This is the 4th time this quarter we've seen [pattern]. Makes you wonder if anyone is actually thinking about [implication]. 👉 [link to evidence]"

Integration with Claude

When using this skill:

  1. Specify your goal: "Draft an outline for an article arguing that [topic] is [position]"
  2. Provide context: "My audience is [description]. I want to focus on [angle]"
  3. Set constraints: "Keep it under 500 words" or "Make it a 6-post thread"
  4. Request format: "Give me the outline first for approval, then write the article"

Claude will generate content matching this voice while maintaining accuracy and intellectual honesty.


Skill Version: 1.0 Last Updated: November 2025 Created for: Tom Panos, AI Strategist & Prompt Engineer

README.md

Critical Article Writer Skill for Claude

A comprehensive skill set designed to help you generate draft articles, outlines, and editorial content that adheres to a distinctive analytical, skeptical voice combining sharp critical commentary with conversational tone, strategic humor, and technical depth.

What's Included

Main Files

  • SKILL.md - Complete skill documentation including voice characteristics, structural guidelines, writing mechanics, and content development strategies
  • README.md - This file

Instruction Guides (in /instructions folder)

  • voice-tone-checklists.md - Pre-writing, during-writing, and post-writing checklists to maintain consistency
  • outline-templates.md - Ready-to-use templates for deep analysis articles, threads, quick takes, and research-backed arguments
  • opening-lines-reference.md - Library of effective opening strategies and closing observations tailored to your voice

Installation for Claude Desktop

  1. Extract the zip file to your Desktop or desired location
  2. Open Claude Desktop
  3. Access Skills Settings (in Claude Desktop preferences/settings)
  4. Add Skill and select this folder or drag the extracted folder into Claude Desktop
  5. Restart Claude Desktop if needed
  6. Begin using: Ask Claude to "use the critical article writer skill to draft an article about [topic]"

How to Use This Skill

Basic Usage

Ask Claude one of these ways:

  • "Use the critical article writer skill to draft an outline for an article about [topic]"
  • "Draft an article using the critical article writer skill about [specific angle]"
  • "Create a thread outline about [topic] using the critical article writer skill"

Effective Prompts

For Outlines: "Draft an outline for an article arguing that [position]. Target audience is [description]. I want to emphasize [angle]. Please use the critical article writer skill."

For Full Articles: "Write a 600-word article about [topic] using the critical article writer skill. Target audience: [description]. Key evidence: [3 data points]. Tone: skeptical but fair."

For Threads: "Create a 5-post thread outline about [topic] using the critical article writer skill. Include [specific angle]. Assume audience has [knowledge level]."

Style Overview

Your Voice: Critical & Conversational

  • Sharp skepticism about tech industry claims and financial models
  • Conversational tone that speaks directly to readers
  • Strategic humor - self-deprecating and dry wit
  • Technical depth - demonstrated knowledge without jargon overload
  • Fair analysis - acknowledges counterarguments and limitations
  • Evidence-driven - specific data, sources, and examples
  • Engaging - rhetorical questions and direct address

Content Themes

  • AI economics and sustainability
  • Business model viability
  • Industry consolidation and dynamics
  • Ethical implications of tech trends
  • Pattern recognition across companies/products

What This Skill Does

✓ Ensures consistent voice across multiple articles ✓ Structures complex arguments logically ✓ Maintains balance between critique and credibility ✓ Prompts for necessary evidence and sources ✓ Guides effective opening and closing strategies ✓ Supports outline creation and content planning ✓ Provides checklists for quality assurance ✓ Offers templates for common content types

Key Features

  • Comprehensive voice guidelines capturing your distinctive analytical perspective
  • Flexible templates for articles, threads, quick takes, and deep dives
  • Structural frameworks for organizing complex arguments
  • Quality checklists to maintain consistency
  • Reference libraries of effective openings and closing strategies
  • Practical examples of how to apply each principle

Tips for Best Results

  1. Provide context: Tell Claude who your audience is and what angle matters most
  2. Include evidence: Share specific data points, studies, or examples you want included
  3. Use checklists: Review the pre/post-writing checklists before finalizing
  4. Iterate: Use the skill to generate outlines first, then refine into full articles
  5. Trust the templates: The outline templates are designed to prompt the right structure

Customization

You can modify any part of SKILL.md to adjust voice, add new themes, or refine templates based on how Claude interprets your style over time. Share updates with Claude by saying "Here's how I'd like to refine the skill..." and pasting your modifications.

Support & Iteration

If Claude isn't perfectly matching your voice:

  1. Share examples of articles you want to emulate
  2. Point out specific phrases or techniques you want more/less of
  3. Reference the checklists to identify tone issues
  4. Update SKILL.md with clarifications
  5. Reload the skill in Claude Desktop

Version: 1.0
Created: November 2025
For: Tom Panos, AI Strategist & Prompt Engineer
Purpose: Streamline creation of high-quality analytical content matching your distinctive voice

Questions? Review SKILL.md for comprehensive guidelines, or ask Claude to clarify how to use specific templates.

Permissions & Security

Security level L1: Low-risk skills with minimal permissions. Review inputs and outputs before running in production.

Requirements

  • OpenClaw CLI installed and configured.
  • Language: Markdown
  • License: MIT
  • Topics:

FAQ

How do I install critical-article-writer?

Run openclaw add @tomstools11/critical-article-writer in your terminal. This installs critical-article-writer into your OpenClaw Skills catalog.

Does this skill run locally or in the cloud?

OpenClaw Skills execute locally by default. Review the SKILL.md and permissions before running any skill.

Where can I verify the source code?

The source repository is available at https://github.com/openclaw/skills/tree/main/skills/tomstools11/critical-article-writer. Review commits and README documentation before installing.