Best Tweets Collections
Study the post formats that consistently perform on X. A curated collection of high-performing structures — specific results, contrarian takes, build-in-public updates, story arcs — with the pattern behind each and a skeleton to write your own.
$[revenue] in [days] days with [product]. No ads. No audience at the start. Here's the entire playbook: [3–5 numbered steps]
Why it works: The pattern behind countless viral builder posts: concrete money + timeframe + 'no shortcuts' framing + a full breakdown. Fails when the numbers are vague.
[Counterintuitive truth stated in under 15 words].
Why it works: Short standalone insights are the most repostable format on X. The bar: it must be something people wish they'd said.
[Time period] ago, everyone said [thing] wouldn't work. Today: [screenshot-worthy result]. [One humble-but-not-really line].
Why it works: Vindication arcs perform because readers root for underdogs — and the doubters engage too.
My entire [workflow] stack: → [Tool]: [what for] → [Tool]: [what for] → [Tool]: [what for] Total cost: [number]. That's it.
Why it works: Stack posts earn massive bookmarks. The 'total cost' line adds the specificity that makes it credible.
Ranked, honestly: 1. [Surprising #1] 2. [Expected item] 3. [Expected item] [One line defending the controversial pick].
Why it works: Rankings invite disagreement in the replies — every 'you're wrong about #1' comment is fuel.
Reminder: You don't need [gatekeeper/credential] to [ambitious thing]. [Proof: someone who did it, or you].
Why it works: Permission-giving posts get shared to the exact people who need them — built-in distribution.
Browse the collection and note which formats fit your material.
Study the pattern notes: what makes each structure work and when it fails.
Copy a skeleton, fill it with your specifics, and track how it performs against your usual posts.
Frequently asked questions
What types of posts perform best on X?
Specific results with the process behind them, informed contrarian takes, useful lists, and personal stories with a transferable lesson. The shared engine: specificity plus a clear takeaway for the reader.
Is it OK to copy post formats?
Formats aren't owned — every great creator studies and reuses structures. Copying someone's actual words is plagiarism; using the same skeleton with your own substance is how writing is learned.
How do I know which formats work for my account?
Test each format 2–3 times and compare engagement per impression against your baseline. Your audience decides — a format that dominates for one account can flop for another.
This tool is one step — Repo-st is the loop
Turn one-off tools into a repeatable X growth system.
Repo-st connects creation, scheduling, engagement, and analytics in one workspace — with AI drafts grounded in what you actually ship.