Migrate from wordtune to chatgpt.
1 documentation-derived translation pattern — what carries over and what to watch for. Cited to the Feature Parity Map; the audit tells you whether the move is worth it.
Wordtune's generative writing (prompt-to-text, Spices, and templates) is a drafting-and-iteration surface, which maps onto ChatGPT Canvas's side-by-side editor where you draft, then ask for revisions, length changes, and reading-level shifts. To consolidate into ChatGPT, recreate Wordtune's prompt-to-text as a Canvas writing session; recreate Spices actions (Continue Writing, Expand On, Add Conclusion, Give Example, Counterargument) as targeted Canvas edit requests using inline highlighting on the relevant passage; and rebuild reused Wordtune templates (LinkedIn posts, emails, product descriptions) as saved prompts or a custom GPT so the format is one click away.
- Warning: Wordtune's generative actions fire in-place inside the document you are already writing in (including via the browser extension across apps); ChatGPT Canvas lives inside chatgpt.com, so writers shift from editing in their app to drafting in a separate tab and pasting back.
- Warning: Wordtune meters generative use against a daily rewrites & AI suggestions cap on lower tiers, while Canvas is gated to ChatGPT Plus, Team, and Enterprise — the cost and limit model is different, not equivalent.
- Warning: Spices and templates are discrete, named one-click actions; in Canvas the equivalent is a free-text instruction, so results depend on prompt quality and are less deterministic than picking a named Wordtune action.