Story Development Infrastructure

Story development infrastructure for writers and development teams.

Get to better story decisions faster.

For Development Teams

Refine and align notes across versions. Adapt IP to different formats and cultures.

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For Writers & Creators

Move from concept to stronger draft with your voice intact.

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Start exploring a story idea

Format

Genre

No account needed to explore. Full features available to invited users.

Built on principles writers can trust.

AI should sharpen your instincts, not replace them. Every tool we build starts from that conviction.

You own your work and your worlds

Full IP ownership, always. No exceptions, no fine print.

We never train on your work

Your stories, notes, and drafts are yours alone. Period.

AI as a creativity enabler, not a replacement

Tools writers can feel good using — designed to strengthen your process, not shortcut it.

We never write for you

AI assists your process. It doesn't replace your voice.

For Development Teams

  • Compare multiple directions before committing
  • Give clearer, more actionable notes to writers
  • Evaluate source material and adaptations faster
  • Adapt IP to different formats and cultures
See how teams use it →

For Writers & Creators

  • Your first draft reads more like a third or fourth draft
  • Beat and scene development that preserves your voice
  • Character work, dialogue refinement, structural analysis
  • Export-ready drafts in industry-standard formats
See how writers use it →

Story Notes that lead to clearer next steps.

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
The pilot establishes a compelling protagonist with clear internal
conflict, but the B-story lacks structural integration with the
main arc. The act-two midpoint needs strengthening.

STRUCTURAL NOTES
 Act 1 setup is efficient — establishes world, stakes, and
  character want within the first 12 pages
 The midpoint reversal on p.32 doesn't connect back to the
  protagonist's internal need established in the opening
 Consider merging the warehouse and diner scenes (pp. 24–28)
  — they serve the same dramatic function

Structured, actionable analysis — what's working, what needs attention, and the clearest path to the next draft.