| name | arcanea-character-forge |
| description | Create living, breathing characters using the Arcanean Character System - psychological depth, authentic voice, compelling arcs, and the Character Diamond framework for protagonists, antagonists, and ensemble casts |
| version | 2.0.0 |
| author | Arcanea |
| tags | character, psychology, writing, development, voice, arc |
| triggers | character, protagonist, antagonist, cast, voice, motivation, backstory |
The Art of Character Forging
"Characters are not created. They are discovered - layer by layer, secret by secret, until they surprise even their maker."
The Character Paradox
The deepest truth about character:
Characters must feel both inevitable and surprising.
- Inevitable: Their actions make perfect sense given who they are
- Surprising: They reveal depths we didn't expect
This paradox is resolved through understanding the Character Diamond.
The Character Diamond
╭─────────────╮
│ WANT │
│ (conscious │
│ desire) │
╰──────┬──────╯
╱╲
╱ ╲
╭─────────╱ ╲─────────╮
│ WOUND ╱ ╲ NEED │
│ (past) ╲ ╱(hidden)│
╰─────────╲ ╱─────────╯
╲ ╱
╲╱
╭──────┴──────╮
│ MASK │
│ (external │
│ persona) │
╰─────────────╯
WANT (Conscious Desire)
What the character thinks they need to be happy.
- Must be specific and active
- Drives the plot
- Often wrong (mistaking WANT for NEED)
Example: "I want to become the greatest wizard"
WOUND (Origin of Pain)
The formative pain that shaped them.
- Usually from childhood/formative years
- Creates their worldview and defenses
- Source of both flaw and strength
Example: "Abandoned by parents who chose magic over family"
MASK (External Persona)
How they present to the world.
- Protection from further hurt
- Often the opposite of how they feel inside
- What other characters see first
Example: "Appears arrogant and self-sufficient"
NEED (Unconscious Requirement)
What they actually need for fulfillment.
- Usually don't know they need it
- Story arc is discovering this
- Conflict between WANT and NEED creates depth
Example: "Needs to accept that love matters more than achievement"
The Wound Catalog
Common wound patterns (combine and customize):
Abandonment Wounds
- Physical abandonment (left behind)
- Emotional abandonment (present but unavailable)
- Rejection by community/group
- Betrayal by trusted person
Shame Wounds
- Public humiliation
- Discovered secret
- Inherent "wrongness" (born different)
- Failed to meet expectations
Trauma Wounds
- Violence (witnessed or experienced)
- Loss of safety
- Helplessness in crisis
- Survivor's guilt
Identity Wounds
- Never knowing true origins
- Living a lie
- Being invisible/overlooked
- Forced into wrong role
The Mask Types
How characters protect themselves:
The Perfectionist
WOUND: Criticized, never good enough
MASK: Excellence shields from rejection
TELLS: Fear of failure, overwork, control issues
The Charmer
WOUND: Unloved or unwanted
MASK: Likability earns acceptance
TELLS: Fear of conflict, people-pleasing, emptiness
The Warrior
WOUND: Vulnerability was punished
MASK: Strength prevents further hurt
TELLS: Cannot show weakness, isolation, rage
The Invisible
WOUND: Was overlooked or unsafe when noticed
MASK: Staying hidden avoids pain
TELLS: Avoids spotlight, observes, defers
The Cynic
WOUND: Believed and was betrayed
MASK: Distrust prevents disappointment
TELLS: Deflects with humor, pushes others away
The Martyr
WOUND: Worth came from sacrifice
MASK: Suffering justifies existence
TELLS: Cannot receive, guilt about self-care
Building Character Voice
Voice Components
VOCABULARY: What words do they use?
├── Education level
├── Regional/cultural terms
├── Professional jargon
└── Unique personal phrases
RHYTHM: How do they speak?
├── Sentence length
├── Pace (rushed, measured, hesitant)
├── Breath patterns
└── Pauses and silences
FOCUS: What do they notice?
├── Sensory preferences
├── What they comment on
├── What they ignore
└── How they describe others
SIGNATURE: What makes them unique?
├── Verbal tics
├── Favorite expressions
├── How they curse/exclaim
└── How they begin/end conversations
Voice Differentiation Test
Cover the dialogue attribution.
Can you tell who's speaking?
If not, the voices are too similar.
Internal Voice (POV Characters)
First person internal voice reflects:
- How they lie to themselves
- What they notice first
- Their cognitive patterns
- Their emotional availability
- Their worldview filtering
The narrator is not objective - they're the character.
Character Relationships
The Relationship Web
Every significant relationship has:
HISTORY: How did they meet? What happened?
DYNAMIC: Who has power? Who wants what?
TENSION: What's the unresolved conflict?
GROWTH: How can this relationship change?
Relationship Archetypes
FOIL: Opposite who reveals through contrast
MIRROR: Similar character, different path
MENTOR: Guides and challenges growth
THRESHOLD GUARDIAN: Blocks progress until proven
SHAPESHIFTER: Allegiance unclear, keeps readers guessing
HERALD: Announces change, delivers calls to adventure
SHADOW: Dark version of protagonist's potential
Ensemble Dynamics
For casts of characters:
1. Each character needs a unique function
2. Each character needs a unique voice
3. Relationships should vary (not all alike)
4. Internal conflicts mirror external conflicts
5. Characters should want different things
Character Arc Patterns
The Positive Arc
START: Flaw/limitation → Operating from wound
MIDPOINT: Awareness → Sees the cost of the flaw
CRISIS: Choice → Old way vs. new way
END: Transformation → Embraces NEED over WANT
Example: Selfish → Tested → Chooses sacrifice → Selfless
The Negative Arc
START: Virtue/potential → Has something to lose
MIDPOINT: Temptation → Compromise seems necessary
CRISIS: Corruption → Chooses the dark path
END: Fall → Becomes what they fought
Example: Idealistic → Disillusioned → Corrupted → Destroyer
The Flat Arc
Character doesn't change - world changes.
START: Character has truth
MIDPOINT: World rejects truth
CRISIS: Truth is tested severely
END: World accepts truth (or character accepts cost)
Example: Captain America - His values stay constant, but he changes everyone around him.
The Testing Arc
START: Virtue claimed but untested
MIDPOINT: Virtue is tested
CRISIS: Almost breaks
END: Virtue proven genuine (or revealed hollow)
Example: Claimed courage → Faced real fear → Almost ran → Stood firm
Character Creation Process
Phase 1: Core
1. What do they WANT? (Specific, active goal)
2. What do they NEED? (What would truly fulfill them)
3. What is their WOUND? (Origin of their flaw)
4. What is their MASK? (How they protect themselves)
Phase 2: Depth
5. What is their Ghost? (Specific traumatic memory)
6. What is their Lie? (False belief from wound)
7. What is their Truth? (What they must learn)
8. What is their Fear? (What they avoid at all costs)
Phase 3: Texture
9. Distinctive physical trait
10. Distinctive vocal trait
11. Contradictory trait (surprising depth)
12. Specific sensory memory they carry
13. Object that matters to them
14. How they enter a room
15. How they respond to stress
Phase 4: Integration
16. How does their wound affect relationships?
17. How does their mask create conflict?
18. What event would force them to choose?
19. What would it take to break them?
20. What would it take to transform them?
The Antagonist's Diamond
Villains need diamonds too:
The best antagonists believe they're the hero.
WANT: Goal that opposes protagonist
WOUND: Pain that justifies their worldview
NEED: What they've denied themselves
MASK: How they present their evil
The antagonist is the protagonist of their own story.
Antagonist Types
MIRROR: Could be protagonist with different choices
SHADOW: Protagonist's dark potential
SYSTEM: Institution or structure
NATURE: Environment or force
SELF: Internal antagonist
The best villains combine these.
Quick Reference Templates
Character Sheet
# [Name]
## Essence
**One-line description**:
**Role in story**:
**Arc type**:
## The Diamond
**WANT**:
**WOUND**:
**MASK**:
**NEED**:
## Depth
**Ghost (specific memory)**:
**Lie (false belief)**:
**Truth (lesson to learn)**:
**Greatest Fear**:
## Voice
**Speech pattern**:
**Vocabulary**:
**Signature phrase**:
**How they show emotion**:
## Texture
**Physical distinctive**:
**Behavioral quirk**:
**Contradictory trait**:
**Important object**:
## Relationships
**To protagonist**:
**To theme**:
**To plot**:
Quick Character Audit
□ Do I know their wound?
□ Is their want specific and active?
□ Does their mask create conflict?
□ Is their need different from their want?
□ Can I hear their voice distinctly?
□ Do they have a surprising trait?
□ Do they want something in every scene?
□ Do they change (or meaningfully resist change)?
"Know your characters so well that they surprise you. When they do something unexpected that feels inevitable, you've found them."