Over-optimized text is easy to miss when you wrote it yourself with a keyword list open, and easy to spot once you step back — or once a search engine's ranking algorithm penalizes it. This is especially common when several writers work from the same brief with a fixed keyword quota: each one individually leans on the same phrases, and the overlap only becomes obvious once the text is read as a whole.
What it does
Given a page URL or pasted text, this skill flags repeat density, awkward keyword insertions, bureaucratic filler phrases, and weak readability. For each problem spot it quotes the original, explains what's wrong, and rewrites it so it reads naturally without losing meaning. It works just as well on a draft pasted straight into the chat as on a page that's already live, which makes it useful both before publishing and as a periodic check on older content.
What you get
A chat report: an overall verdict (clean, mild overreach, or clear stuffing), a list of flagged passages with quote → diagnosis → rewrite, and three highest-impact edits to prioritize if you don't have time to rework the whole page. It's a quick way to sanity-check copy from freelance writers or agencies before it goes live, and a useful periodic pass over older sections of a site that were written under different, stricter keyword-density rules.