The problem

You both know someone should apologise. Neither of you will. Not because you don't care, but because going first feels like admitting you were entirely wrong, when really you were only mostly wrong. Maybe 60/40. Maybe 70/30. But definitely not 100.

So you wait. They wait. The evening gets quieter. Someone eventually says "fine" in a tone that means the opposite. And you both pretend it's resolved while it absolutely isn't.

How Piece helps

After both of you record your sides, the AI delivers a verdict: who was more in the wrong, and why. Then it prompts that person to apologise.

The key word is "prompts." Piece doesn't write the apology. It doesn't script what you should say. It points at one person and says: your turn. What you do with that is yours.

The apology matters more than the verdict. Most couples say that once the deadlock breaks, the conversation that follows is the real resolution. The AI just got them there faster.

Who it's for

Couples where both people are reasonable but stubborn. The ones who know an apology is coming but can't quite get there because neither wants to be the one who blinks first. Piece blinks for you.

Pick your tone

The app delivers the verdict (and the apology prompt) in one of four tones:

Picking the tone together is often the first moment of agreement after the argument. That's not accidental.