A creator tool, not a chatbot.

Likho exists for one specific frustration. Every time you sit down to make a song in Suno, you open a separate AI chat, write a prompt, get back lyrics that ignore Suno's metatag rules, and reformat them by hand. We took the entire ritual and turned it into a button.

Why a purpose-built tool?

Generic AI chats don't know Suno. They don't know metatags go on their own line. They don't know the 1000-character cap on style prompts, or that negative tags belong at the end. Likho bakes those rules into every prompt so the output is paste-ready. The result is that the slowest, most annoying part of making a song in Suno — the reformatting and the retries — simply disappears, and you spend your time on the part that matters: the writing.

How it works under the hood

Two AI models run in parallel: one tuned for creative lyric writing, and one for music genre and production knowledge that shapes the style-of-music prompt. A lightweight orchestrator runs all three outputs — lyrics, style prompt, and title — concurrently and streams them back as they're written, so you get a complete, Suno-formatted result in seconds rather than waiting on one field at a time. Every output is validated against Suno's real constraints before it reaches you: section tags on their own lines, modifier tags stacked the way the parser reads them, and style prompts kept under the character cap.

Who's behind Likho?

Likho is built by Yash Patkar, a developer who kept hitting the same wall every time he tried to make a song in Suno — great ideas, but a tedious loop of prompting a chatbot, getting back lyrics that broke Suno's format, and fixing them by hand. Likho is the tool he wanted to exist: one that understands Suno's rules so creators don't have to. It's built and maintained directly, with a small, focused scope — do the idea-to-Suno-inputs step exceptionally well, and nothing else.