Please 100, 1000, & 10000 times

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How the Please Repeater Works

No loading spinner, no "Generate" button to hunt for — your wall of "Please" builds live as you tweak each option. Here's the flow:

1
Type your ask (or grab a preset)

Enter exactly what you're pleading for, or pick one of our ready-made lines if you're blanking on words.

2
Set how many "Please"s you need

Dial it from 10x for a light nudge all the way up to 10,000x when you're not taking no for an answer.

3
Pick a shape for the message

Straight, Centered, Zigzag, or Snake — the same please reads completely differently depending on the layout.

4
Fine-tune the details

Stack one per line, add numbering, or drop in a separator like 🥺 or • between each repeat.

Everything updates the second you touch a setting — there's nothing to wait on. When it looks right, hit Copy All to send it, or Download as .txt to keep it on hand.

Why Asking Once Doesn't Always Land

People skim texts. A single "please" blends into everything else in the conversation. Stack it dozens or hundreds of times and suddenly it's impossible to scroll past without reacting.

  1. 👀
    Impossible to Ignore

    One "please" is easy to leave on read. A whole screen of them forces a response — even if that response is just laughing and giving in.

  2. 🎭
    Fits the Tone You're Going For

    Dress it up as dramatic begging, a playful joke, or a genuinely earnest request — the layout and count do the emotional heavy lifting.

  3. 🚀
    Ready Instantly

    Runs entirely in your browser. Repeat your please up to 10,000 times with zero wait, zero sign-up.

How Many "Please"s Does Your Situation Actually Need?

Asking your friend to send a meme and asking your parents to extend your curfew call for very different levels of desperation. Match the count to how much you actually need this to work.

  • 😊
    10x - The Casual Nudge

    Asking a group chat to vote, nudging a sibling to pass the remote, or any low-stakes request that just needs a little emphasis.

  • 🥺
    100x - The Classic Beg

    The default for a reason. Enough to look genuinely desperate without tipping into overkill — perfect for talking a friend into plans or convincing a parent.

  • 🙇
    1,000x - The Last Resort

    For when you've already asked nicely twice and you're now fully committed to the bit — a boss for a day off, a landlord for a favor, a partner for forgiveness.

Make "Please" Actually Mean Something Again

Say it once and it barely registers — everyone's typed a throwaway "please" without thinking twice about it. This tool takes that same tired word and turns it into something that actually pulls focus, whether you're begging a friend to cover your shift, talking your way out of trouble, or just being dramatic for the group chat.

Type out your own please, or lean on a preset if you're stuck on wording. From there, the count sets the tone: 10x reads as a light ask, 100x is the go-to for a proper beg, and 1,000x or the full 10,000x turns it into an event.

Layout changes the mood more than people expect. Straight text feels blunt and urgent. Centered text looks deliberate, like you actually sat down and meant it. Zigzag and snake shapes lean silly, great for a joke that still gets the point across. Add numbering or an emoji separator and the whole thing looks intentional instead of copy-pasted.

There's no "Generate" step slowing anything down. Your message, the repeat count, the shape, and the formatting all update the preview live, so what you see is exactly what gets sent.

Once it's ready, copying takes one tap — straight into texts, DMs, group chats, or comments. Want to save it instead, maybe for a card or a follow-up message later? Download it as a plain .txt file and it's there whenever you need it.

Runs fully client-side — no account, no install, no cap on how many times you generate a new one. Whether it's a quick joke "please" for the group chat or a full-blown wall of begging for something you genuinely need, the tool bends to whatever the moment calls for.

At the end of the day, repetition is what makes people actually stop and read. A single "please" is easy to brush off — a hundred of them, formatted right, is a lot harder to say no to.