Convoke
Free in open beta

Session recaps that write themselves. So you do not have to.

Campaign Scribe reads your party's chat, drafts a recap, and hands it to you for edits. Publishing takes ninety seconds. Your players walk into the next session already aligned. Your voice — and your secrets — stay yours.

No credit card. 5e today, more systems coming.

Why this exists

The recap problem.

Every GM knows the math. A four-hour session generates an hour of recap work — if you do it. Most do not. Without recaps, the first thirty minutes of every session is "what were we doing again?" and the player who missed last week is permanently behind.

Scribe takes the part of GMing that nobody actually loves — the recap — and turns it into a draft you can fix in two minutes.

How it works.

1. Scribe reads what already happened

Convoke logs your party chat with timestamps, dice rolls, and IC/OOC tags. Scribe ingests the session's messages and identifies key moments — encounters, decisions, NPC introductions, lore reveals.

2. Scribe drafts a recap

You get a draft in your voice — Scribe learns from recaps you have edited before. It tags the key NPCs and locations to your wiki automatically.

3. You edit

Trim, add, rewrite, delete. The draft is a starting point, not a final cut. You always see exactly what Scribe is going to say before any player sees it.

4. You publish

One click sends the recap to the party feed. Players who missed the session catch up in two minutes. New players joining mid-campaign get real continuity.

What Scribe knows not to say.

  • Hidden lore. If a lore entry is marked secret or unrevealed, Scribe will not mention it.
  • Per-player knowledge. Scribe respects who-knows-what state. The barbarian's recap can read differently from the wizard's.
  • GM whispers. Anything in a private channel with you stays out of the recap.

What Scribe is not.

  • Not a ghostwriter. It drafts; you decide what is true.
  • Not required. Disable it per-campaign. Convoke works perfectly without a single AI call.
  • Not a replacement for GM judgment. Scribe's draft is a suggestion. The canon is whatever you publish.

Spend less time on recaps. Spend more time at the table.