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Our Honest Quillza Review: Is It Really A Useful Writing Assistant?

Writing has become more difficult than ever. Many people may think otherwise, but I think any type of writing is harder because of the demands today. Google wants us to write AI and plagiarism-free content, and readers demand unique perspectives and value.

That’s why 58% of companies now use generative AI tools to make content creation easier for them.

I use AI writing assistants too. And today’s topic is on a writing assistant as well, the Quillza.

This tool is quite new, but it seems promising. It claims to have everything that helps you write smarter. I have decided to find out by putting it to the test.

There will be no fluff. Just a real-time review to see if it actually helps or if it’s just another tool that looks smart but barely does anything. Like my last review.

My first impression visiting quillza.com

Alright, I have opened this quillza.com, and I can see that the interface is clean and minimal. Honestly, I was expecting flashy ads, maybe one or two pop-ups, and a long sales copy.

On the contrary, the homepage gets straight to the point: “Create Without Limits With Quillza.” No jargon, no distractions, just a bold claim and a clean interface.

I don’t see a big writing box, but there are a few tool options in the middle:

Quill 1

So far, so good. It feels like a tool made for people who just want to write, without going through a menu dropdown first.

I see a sign-up button, but I don’t think I need to sign up just to try it. I always feel good about such tools.

Next, I’ve decided to take each feature for a test. If Quillza claims to be a real writing assistant, it should help me in more ways than just fixing a few grammar slips.

Testing the features of Quillza one by one

Next, I’ve decided to take each feature for a test but with a twist. I will be testing each tool in a different language. So, I can test it working as well as language capabilities.

1. Paraphrasing tool

I am starting with the paraphrasing tool. I have generated a paragraph with ChatGPT in Portuguese, and I am going to rephrase it with Quillza. This way, I will see if it actually improves the sentences in another language.

So I will switch to Portuguese and see how its rewriting ability is.

Quill 2

Quillza’s paraphrasing tool has paraphrased the content in the Portuguese language quite well. I tested it with different modes and languages. It handled them all well, keeping the meaning intact while simplifying the flow. Not bad at all.

2. AI humanizer

Next, I am giving a go to the AI Humanizer. I will drop in a paragraph I generated earlier with another AI tool in Spanish. It sounds robotic and has 83% AI on QuillBot’s AI detector.

Quill 3

I want to test if Quillza can humanize this AI text. Because many times I translate my AI-free text into Spanish and check AI again, the detector shows some similarity, which is always annoying.

It offers many different humanizing modes like Pro, personalized, academic, casual, and first person. But I think “first person” will be the best. Let’s see.

Quill 4

I think it has pulled it off. I can’t be sure without getting the opinion of QuillBot. But for me, it seems completely fine.

Quill 5

Now I am officially impressed. This tool has done something extraordinary. I will definitely use this tool to avoid AI content without losing quality.

3. AI rewriter

Okay, this one’s interesting. The AI rewriter is sort of like paraphrasing, but with more flexibility. I will test it the same way I did with the paraphrasing tool. However, I will test it with different tone and language settings.

I will see how it does when the input is given in Italian. The tone I will use this time will be “Casual.”

Quill 6

Good again! So far, I have used three tools, three languages, and many modes of quillza.com. It has worked very well until now. So, let’s see how it goes further.

4. AI summarizer

Time to try something different. I will feed it a long 500-word opinion-based article and click Summarize. But first, I have to choose a summary mode. Yes! It has modes for summary, too. I can choose to summarize in paragraphs, bullet points, key sentences, and headlines.

I am going to use the first two only. The paragraphs will be the same for both. We will see how results differ in these modes. How about French this time? Let’s do it.

Quill 7

Quill 8 1

These results are good as well. Definitely useful for summarizing results in any language.

5. AI writer

Now let’s see if Quillza can write from scratch. I am asking it to write a 150-word paragraph on “Why morning routines matter,” but in Indonesian. And I want it to be in a first-person voice.

Quill 9

The response is surprisingly readable. The tone is friendly, the structure makes sense, and it didn’t sound like a generic ChatGPT copy. It feels like something I can easily edit and publish.

For a free tool, this is quite a solid result in a non-English language. But don’t expect deep originality; it’s more of a first draft than the final piece.

6. Grammar checker

Next up, the grammar checker. I have used writing evaluators before, and most of them work fine. The challenge for this tool is to find mistakes and suggest improvements in the German language.

I have generated a paragraph in the German language with deliberate grammar, spelling, and punctuation mistakes. I want to see if this tool can find all of them without any difficulty.

Quill 10

Not only has this tool found grammar mistakes, but also pointed out tone inconsistencies and clarity issues in my sentences that I deliberately made.

It means it reads the content and intent of the passage and then rewrites the lines without errors.

7. Ask AI

This one feels like a little helper. You can ask anything from it, and it will answer accordingly. Testing this one is quite easy. I will just ask a few questions and see if the answers provided by the tool are relevant or not.

The first question is “3 blog title ideas for a post on digital detoxing.” The answer is,

Exactly what I was looking for.

So, the next question is “Describe the concept of ‘quantum entanglement’ in simple terms.” This question is a bit technical, so I am expecting it to be answered in a simple way. That a normal person can easily understand it.

It is quite simple, but not as I was expecting. It should have been a bit more descriptive and easier.

The final question is “If a company’s stock price increases by 15% in Q1 and then decreases by 8% in Q2, what is the net percentage change over the two quarters? Explain the calculation.”

The answer is right. This shows we can use this tool for our daily queries and calculations without hesitating.

8. ChatGPT free

ChatGPT is the most popular AI tool worldwide, with 400 million weekly users. But its latest version is paid. Quillza allows its users to use ChatGPT for free through this tool, ChatGPT free.

Let’s see if its answers are as good as ChatGPT’s.

It doesn’t feel as powerful as the full version of GPT-4, but it works fine for basic brainstorming.

Are there any alternatives to Quillza?

As I said, I have used many tools like Quillza before. It is necessary for me to tell you about more tools like this one, so you can test them and choose what you like best.

1. QuillBot

This one is the main competitor to Quillza. It offers many different tools as well. But not all for free. Many tools are only for premium accounts, and the tools that are free have limits.

On the other hand, all the tools in Quillza are free and unlimited to use. You do not even have to sign up here.

However, QuillBot has some tools that Quillza does not yet possess. Like the plagiarism checker, citation generator, etc.

2. Paragraph-generator.com

This is another platform that offers many tools, modes, and languages like Quillza. But it is short of a few tools. Like ChatGPT free, Ask AI, and a humanizer tool.

However, it offers many more modes for writing and rewriting than Quillza does. For example, persuasive, descriptive, creative, and expository.

3. ChatGPT

How can I forget the most famous AI tool in the entire world? You can ask ChatGPT to do all the things that Quillza’s 8 tools do.

But you have to have a lot of command of prompting. Because you will have to explain each and everything in detail. If not, your results will be of a very low quality.

So, if you know prompt engineering, go for ChatGPT. Otherwise, use Quillza to write smarter, not harder.

Conclusion

After testing all eight tools and comparing them with popular alternatives, I can honestly say Quillza.com is more than just hype.

It’s a practical, beginner-friendly writing assistant. It handles multiple languages impressively and does it all for free.

It’s not just another tool with big claims. It delivers where it matters. So, give it a try and see how it fits into your writing workflow. You might be surprised at how useful it actually is.

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