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Twitter Comment Generator

Generate realistic X (Twitter) reply screenshots with avatars, verified badges, handles, and a full reply, repost, like, and views action bar. Save as PNG.

The short version

This draws X replies. Not a single standalone post, but a stack of comments under one, each with the full action bar: the reply bubble, the repost arrows, the like heart, the views chart, and a share icon out on the right edge. Stack one reply or six.

Three themes ship with it. Light for documents, Dim for that slate blue X uses, and Dark for the true black “lights out” look. Pick whichever matches wherever the image is going.

Three themes, one look

X screenshots betray their fakes through color, so all three palettes are pulled straight from the real thing. Dim isn’t gray, it’s #15202B. Dark isn’t near-black, it’s pure #000000. The secondary text, the dividers, the blue links, all of it shifts correctly when you switch.

Each reply carries a “Replying to @handle” line in muted gray with the handle in X blue, and you set that handle once at the top. Toggle the line off on any reply that doesn’t need it.

The verified badge is the scalloped blue check drawn on the canvas, not an emoji, so it stays crisp at any size. Turn it on for the accounts that should have it and leave the rest plain.

Every reply, fully editable

Each card in the list controls one reply. You get:

  • Display name in bold plus the @handle and a short time like 2h
  • The reply text, wrapped automatically across as many lines as it needs
  • Four counts across the action bar: replies, reposts, likes, views
  • A Liked toggle that fills the heart X’s pink (#F91880) and turns the like count pink to match

Leave the views field blank and it still draws fine. Add an avatar per account or let the colored initial disc stand in. Between stacked replies a thin hairline divider appears, the same separator X uses in its conversation view.

Who reaches for this

Community managers plan out reply strategy and show it to a brand before anything goes live. Seeing the thread mocked up beats describing it in a doc.

Marketers build case studies and pitch decks around conversations that feel real. Educators put them in front of students learning to spot doctored screenshots, which have gotten good enough that the lesson genuinely matters now. And people making videos or blog posts use them as illustrations without dragging a live account into frame.

Numbers sell the whole thing, so keep them proportional. Replies almost always have fewer likes than the post they answer, and X abbreviates counts, so 1.2K reads true where 1200 reads wrong.

FAQ

Does this post to X?

No. It builds an image, nothing more. There’s no login, no connection to X, and nothing ever gets published. You get a PNG on your device.

How many replies can I stack?

As many as you want. Add fills a new card, remove clears one, and the canvas resizes to fit the thread every time.

Can each reply have its own avatar and verified badge?

Yep, all of it is per reply. Separate name, handle, avatar, verified state, counts, and liked state on every single one.

What’s the difference from the Tweet Image Generator?

That tool makes one clean standalone post. This one builds a conversation: several replies stacked with dividers and a full action bar on each, matching how X shows a thread.

Why do the counts look off in my export?

Usually it’s formatting. X shortens big numbers, so use compact forms like 284, 1.2K, or 89K rather than long strings, and the bar will read the way a real screenshot does.

twitter x reply comment screenshot

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