Chronicle debuts after 100K+ join waitlist

The wait is over for presentations. Chronicle launches publicly after 100K+ join waitlist. This AI tool combines deep research with professional design to help anyone create compelling presentations. Founded by two presentation experts, it promises to deliver storytelling that once required years of experience.

North America | Guest Author
03 June 2025, 4:33pm 

Chronicle, an AI presentation tool, launches publicly with 100,000 waitlisted users. Often called the ‘Cursor for Presentations,’ it aims to change how presentations are created by combining AI with design.

Chronicle allows users to build presentations quickly, focusing on content and structure over traditional slide formats. Chronicle handles the heavy lifting of conducting deep research, distilling key insights, and ensuring every element strengthens your narrative.

This empowers anyone to create presentations with the depth and polish that typically requires years of expertise. The result is a presentation that feels hand-crafted by a professional designer and storyteller.

Chronicle aims to deliver on the decades old promise of accessible, elevated storytelling by combining the speed of AI with a profound understanding of what makes presentations truly compelling.

Chronicle was founded by two self-proclaimed “presentation nerds,” Mayuresh Patole and Tejas Gawande. “We’ve bottled up the storytelling and attention guidance secrets of great presenters and built them into Chronicle,” says Mayuresh.

“Every template, layout, and widget has been designed to improve the audience experience and nudges creators to tell a story rather than simply dump information.” “I was spending countless hours engineering solutions within traditional tools to achieve what should have been simple,” says Mayuresh.

“With recent advances in AI, we finally have the technology to build what I’ve been trying to hack together manually for years.”

Meanwhile, Tejas used his background in growth and social media to identify the shifting landscape of information consumption. “What worked in presentations a decade ago falls completely flat today,” Tejas explains.

“Modern audiences are trained by social media to expect information that’s visual, scannable, and high-impact.”

Chronicle’s free beta is available at chroniclehq.com

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