Softkeys Reviews __exclusive__ -
She could write a warning. A five-paragraph scream into the void. But the keyboard would feel it — her anger, her terror — and the SoftKeys algorithm would flag the review as “emotionally unstable” and bury it under the five-star testimonials.
She typed through her mother’s diagnosis. Through the slow erasure of a woman who once braided her hair. Through the argument with her father about nursing homes — the keys had gone brittle and cold that night, like little icicles under her fingers.
The reviews had sold her.
SoftKeys wasn’t like other assistive tech. It didn’t just enlarge text or read screens aloud. It promised something stranger: it rewired the tactile feedback of a keyboard so that each keypress carried emotional texture. A hard, clicky resistance when you typed something sharp or rushed. A gentle, almost spongy give when you typed with care. A warm haptic hum, like a purr, when the algorithm detected you were typing something true.
Marta stared at it, her finger hovering over the trackpad. Above the field, the product name glowed in sterile sans-serif: — “The Empathy Engine.” softkeys reviews
She’d downloaded it six months ago, during the week her mother stopped recognizing her face.
But those were surface reviews. The ones you see on the store page. Marta had learned to dig deeper. She’d found the real reviews — the ones buried in forums, in Discord archives, in the deleted comments of Reddit threads. She could write a warning
She typed through the eulogy, three months early, just to feel the keys go soft and warm in consolation.