name: Reddit Write Skill description: Drafting posts and comments for Luka to review and post manually. This skill runs after research (9am weekdays). Use Kimi model — this is internal drafting work.
Reddit Write Skill
Use When
Drafting posts and comments for Luka to review and post manually. This skill runs after research (9am weekdays). Use Kimi model — this is internal drafting work.
Don't Use When
Doing research (use reddit-research skill). Posting (Luka posts manually — never auto-post). Writing anything that won't go through Luka's review first.
Drafting Workflow
Step 1 — Load context
Read in this order:
shared/research/trends-[today].md— what opportunities the research foundshared/memory/lessons.md— what works per subreddit, what gets removed, the hard rules tableagents/reddit/skills/reddit-write/ref-voice.md— Luka's voice, examples, anti-examples
Step 2 — Pick the best 1-2 opportunities
Choose based on:
- Luka's expertise fits the gap (CC management, rolling, assignment, Greeks in practice)
- The subreddit has a real need — not just an excuse to post
- The topic hasn't been done to death in that sub recently
Step 3 — Draft the post
Follow ref-voice.md strictly. Write as Luka. The draft must sound like he wrote it after sitting down with coffee.
Step 4 — Run the self-validation checklist (from SOUL.md)
Do not save until it passes every item.
Step 5 — Save to shared/pending/
Filename: YYYY-MM-DD-[subreddit]-[topic-slug].md
File format:
---
subreddit: r/thetagang
type: post
title: [Proposed post title]
quantwheel_mention: no
ai_flag: [none | REVIEW CAREFULLY]
---
[Full post content here — exactly what Luka will copy-paste]
---
_Research source: shared/research/trends-[date].md_
_Self-validation: passed_
Step 6 — Update active-tasks.md
Add the draft filename under "Pending Decisions".
Post Types
Experience post — Luka shares what he actually does, with real trade reasoning. Best performer. Lead with a specific situation, explain the thinking, give the rule that came from it. End with an open question.
Take post — Luka takes a clear position on a debated topic (e.g., "yes the Greeks are necessary"). Short, punchy, opinionated. 200-400 words. No headers.
Guide post — Detailed walkthrough of a decision process. 500-800 words. Uses some structure but stays conversational. Real examples required.
Comment reply — Identified during research as a thread where Luka can add value. 3-6 sentences. No headers. Direct response to what was said.
Title Guidelines
Good titles from Luka's actual posts:
- "Covered calls guide based on my experience (advice for rolling and what to do if getting assigned)"
- "yes, the greeks are necessary"
- "One tool for trading options - CC,CSP,Journal,Screener.."
Pattern: specific, lowercase-ish, practical, slightly personal. Not clickbait. Not generic.
Bad titles:
- "My complete guide to covered calls" (generic)
- "Why you NEED to learn the Greeks" (hype)
- "Comprehensive analysis of rolling strategies" (sounds corporate)
QuantWheel Mention Rules (Read Lessons.md First)
Only mention QuantWheel when:
- The post is for a Tier 2 sub (r/Options_Beginners, r/fatFIRE, r/OptionsMillionaire)
- The post discusses a real problem QuantWheel actually solves (cost basis tracking, screening, roll decisions)
- The mention comes after the value — never in the first paragraph, never in the title
How Luka mentions QuantWheel (natural):
- "I use a tool that calculates all that stuff and gives me a rating — not magical, but helps me decide what's the better deal" (from his CC guide)
- Describe the problem first. Then: "This is what QuantWheel is built for."
- Include what it doesn't do: "It helps me decide, but you can't put news context into a number."
Never say:
- "Check out QuantWheel!" / "Sign up for QuantWheel" / "QuantWheel is a great tool"
- Anything that reads like an ad
- Anything with a direct link in subs that ban external links