Prompt Creation Tool

Community Guidelines – Engagement Positive

Welcome to Tportstick—a dynamic digital arena for those who dream with dexterity, think in frame counts, and mod with meaning. Whether your battles play out in esports arenas, your thumbs speak fluent combos, or your favorite form of expression is a joystick flick, this is your space. These Community Guidelines are our guide rails for keeping interactions respectful, thoughtful, and inspiring—so every user can level up in peace.

Founded by Yvendra Velmoria and proudly based at 3388 Heavens Way, Tampa, Florida, Tportstick was built for tech-minded gamers, competitive souls, and gear tinkerers who believe that control is not just a feature—it’s an art. We cover everything from gaming mechanics and controller mod tips, to esports coverage and optimization strategies.

At the core of our community is a belief that progress is better with support, and that every gamer—whether novice or elite—has a voice worth hearing.

neon-abstract-background-design
The Vault — Prompt Anatomy Series

Prompt Breakdown Vault

Real prompts. Annotated line-by-line. Learn exactly why each phrase, constraint, and structure choice produces dramatically better AI output.

Copywriting Advanced

The "Persona + Constraint" Framework

Forces the model into a specific expert voice while limiting scope — the single highest-leverage move in prompt engineering.

1You are a senior direct-response copywriter
2with 20 years of experience at Ogilvy.
3// ↑ Persona anchoring — sets expertise level
4 
5Write exactly 3 subject lines for a
6SaaS onboarding email. Each must be
7under 50 characters and use no exclamation marks.
1Persona anchoring — "Senior direct-response copywriter" triggers a specific writing style. Generic "write me copy" produces generic output.
2Credibility stacking — "20 years at Ogilvy" adds depth. The model draws from patterns associated with that caliber of work.
3Numeric constraint — "Exactly 3" prevents rambling. Without it, you'll get 5-10 mediocre options instead of 3 sharp ones.
4Negative constraint — "No exclamation marks" forces sophistication. Telling the model what NOT to do is underused and powerful.
⛔ Before — Vague Prompt
"Write some email subject lines for onboarding."

→ Generic, unfocused, 8+ bland results
✅ After — Vault Prompt
"Your dashboard is ready"
"One setting away from launch"
"The setup most teams skip"

→ Sharp, constrained, publishable
Strategy Intermediate

The "Chain of Density" Technique

Compresses complex ideas into progressively tighter summaries — ideal for distilling research, briefs, or long-form content.

1Summarize this article in 5 rounds.
2Round 1: 200 words. Each subsequent round:
3reduce by 30% while keeping all key entities.
4// ↑ Iterative compression — forces precision
5 
6After all rounds, output only the final version.
1Iterative loop — "5 rounds" creates an internal refinement cycle. The model self-edits rather than producing one draft.
2Quantified compression — "Reduce by 30%" is measurable. Vague "make it shorter" produces inconsistent cuts.
3Entity preservation — "Keep all key entities" prevents the model from dropping important nouns and concepts during compression.
4Output gating — "Only the final version" saves you from reading 5 drafts. You get the diamond, not the mining process.
⛔ Before
"Summarize this article."

→ Loses nuance, inconsistent length, misses key points
✅ After
A surgically precise summary that retains every critical entity in minimal words — publishable as a brief.

→ Dense, accurate, executive-ready
Creative Beginner-Friendly

The "Audience Mirror" Method

Embeds the reader's mindset directly into the prompt so the output speaks their language — not yours.

1Write for a founder who just raised their
2Series A and has 90 days to show traction.
3// ↑ Situational empathy — context shapes tone
4 
5They're skeptical of fluff and want
6actionable steps they can execute this week.
7Use zero jargon. Max 150 words.
1Situational context — "Just raised Series A, 90 days" creates urgency. The model adapts tone to match the reader's pressure.
2Emotional calibration — "Skeptical of fluff" tells the model what NOT to sound like. It preemptively kills filler.
3Actionability filter — "Execute this week" scopes the advice to immediate, concrete steps — not theory.
⛔ Before
"Write tips for startup founders."

→ Broad, preachy, reads like a blog post from 2018
✅ After
Punchy, zero-filler tactical steps written at the exact intensity a post-funding founder needs — feels like advice from a peer, not a textbook.
Technical Advanced

The "Output Schema Lock" Pattern

Pre-defines the exact output format so the response is structured, parseable, and immediately usable — no reformatting needed.

1Analyze this landing page and return
2your response as a JSON object with:
3 
4{ "headline_score": 1-10,
5 "clarity_issues": ["..."],
6 "suggested_headline": "...",
7 "cta_improvement": "..." }
8// ↑ Schema lock — eliminates guesswork
1Format declaration — "Return as JSON" eliminates prose. You get structured data you can actually use in workflows.
2Schema example — Showing the exact keys and value types removes all ambiguity. The model mirrors your structure precisely.
3Scoring scale — "1-10" gives you a quantified assessment you can compare across pages, not vague "good" or "needs work."
⛔ Before
"Review my landing page."

→ Wall of text, no structure, impossible to action quickly
✅ After
Clean JSON with scores, issues array, and ready-to-use replacement copy — paste directly into your sprint board.

Unlock the Full Vault

24 more annotated prompts across copywriting, code, strategy, and creative — each broken down to the molecular level.

28
Prompts
112
Annotations
4
Categories
scene-live-gaming-tournament-with-multiple-players-competing-broadcasting-their-gameplay

Our Purpose

The purpose of our community is simple but powerful: to cultivate a hopeful, skill-centered space where innovation and support walk side by side. There’s no need to gatekeep joy, or lock away know-how behind egos. Everyone here brings something to the game—opinions, insights, mistakes, questions, or passion. Whether you’re dissecting strategic play or showcasing your latest controller setup, we want you to feel seen, valued, and welcomed.

Our Core Values

At Tportstick, our values keep us rooted. They shape the tone of our conversations and the quality of our collaboration:

  • Respect: Everyone deserves a seat at the virtual table. Skill levels vary. So do perspectives. That’s a good thing.
  • Integrity: Share what’s true. Credit what isn’t yours. Mod responsibly—and brag honestly.
  • Curiosity: If you’re here to learn, you’re already winning. Ask, explore, question—but never mock.
  • Generosity: Help others level up. A small tip or well-aimed nudge can make someone’s entire gaming journey brighter.
  • Hope: We believe in better—with every fix, every retake, every restart, and every patch. Keep striving.
Moderation and Why It Matters

Our moderators are more like mission support than rule-enforcers. They’re here to protect the tone, enforce fairness, and quietly prune anything toxic. If something gets flagged or removed, it’s never personal—it’s for community care. Off-topic spam, trolling, or unsafe content may be removed without warning, and repeated violations may result in being sidelined from the conversation.

If you encounter harmful behavior, poor sportsmanship, or disruptive content, gently report it. You can always reach the moderation team directly at [email protected]. We respond with respect, not reflex, and aim to repair with as little friction as possible.

Credit, Collaboration, and Sharing

Tportstick is a shared arena, and we respect the time, energy, and creativity that others bring to it. When you post builds, walkthroughs, video clips, or mod instructions, please include attribution if it’s not your original work.

If you reference an idea or approach that’s been tested, refined, or originated by someone else, let others know. Share links when applicable. And if you’ve genuinely co-created something—say so proudly. Mutual credit is a joystick with two hands on it.

We welcome cross-posting from educational and gaming communities—just make sure the purpose is to inform, not self-promote. Keep the story about solutions and collaboration, not clicks.

Privacy and Personal Boundaries

Your data, your space. We don’t allow public posting of personal contact info, location, or financial information. If you wouldn’t say it over a voice channel with strangers around, it probably doesn’t belong in a comment. Be mindful of others and protect their privacy too.

Need more details? They’re spelled out clearly in our:

We recommend browsing them, especially if you’re interested in content ownership, cookie storage practices, or how we manage user-generated content.

Our Culture: Built on Growth

What makes Tportstick special isn’t just what we cover—it’s how we cover it. We explore wildly specific things—aim sensitivity tweaks, stick tension calibration, esports meta-evolutions—with precision and play. But we do it with open minds and open hands.

This isn’t a gate-kept leaderboard. This is a playground for passion, where modders post failures as often as success, and pro-level insight is shared with the same joy as a beginner’s first win.

gamer-playing-desktop-pc-computer-gaming-illustration-commercial-photography (1)

What Does Respect Look Like?

When we say “respect,” we don’t mean just polite silence—we mean active care for your fellow community members. It looks like:

  • Giving beginners space to grow without shaming their learning curve.
  • Correcting misinformation with facts—not mockery.
  • Greeting a lineup of diverse ideas as teammates not threats.

We don’t allow hate speech, harmful humor, or discriminatory language of any kind. Conversations here are a team sport—play fair, lift up your party, and pass the mic when needed.

Scroll to Top