Using Muses on Your Phone
How the editor, inspiration, and AI chat fit on a small screen — three swipeable pages, a block toolbar, and AI reviews in a slide-up sheet.
Last updated: June 24, 2026
Muses works on your phone with the same writing it does on desktop — just laid out for a small screen. You can draft, ask the AI for help, and review its changes without switching to a computer.
Three pages you swipe between
On a phone, the workspace splits into three full-screen pages. Swipe sideways to move between them:
- Editor — your article, where you write and edit.
- Inspiration — the ideas and snippets you've saved.
- AI chat — the assistant, the same one as on desktop.
Instead of panels sitting side by side like on a wide screen, each gets its own page so there's room to work.
Editing blocks with the toolbar
Tap into your article and a block toolbar gives you the actions that live in the side margins on desktop — insert a block, move one up or down, or delete it — sized for touch. Your text is made of blocks (paragraphs, headings, lists), and the toolbar acts on the block you're in.
Reviewing AI changes in a sheet
When you ask the AI to rewrite existing text, the review slides up as a sheet from the bottom of the screen. Accept or reject each change one by one, exactly like the desktop review — and just like desktop, your original text stays put until you accept. See Letting AI Rewrite Your Draft.
Same abilities as desktop
The core editor is shared between phone and desktop, so what you can do is the same: writing, AI chat, inspiration, the outline, importing and exporting, and autosave that protects your work everywhere. A few desktop conveniences — like dragging panels to resize them — don't apply on a small screen, but nothing essential is missing.
When the phone is the right tool
- Great on the phone: a quick edit, capturing an idea, or reviewing and accepting AI suggestions while you're away from your desk.
- Easier on desktop: long drafting sessions and side-by-side work, where a bigger screen helps.