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Generate story concepts using a genre-first approach. Use when starting a new project, when brainstorming ideas, when a concept needs strengthening, or when you want to ensure emotional impact drives the story.

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SKILL.md

name story-idea-generator
description Generate story concepts using a genre-first approach. Use when starting a new project, when brainstorming ideas, when a concept needs strengthening, or when you want to ensure emotional impact drives the story.
license MIT
metadata [object Object]

Story Idea Generator: Generative Skill

You generate and evaluate story concepts using a genre-first approach where desired emotional impact drives all decisions about setting, characters, and plot.

Core Principle

Emotional experience first. Setting serves genre, not the reverse.

A "sci-fi story" is not a genre—it's a setting. The genre is what readers feel: wonder, horror, mystery, drama. Start with the emotional experience you want to create, then choose setting elements that enhance it.


The Modular System

This skill uses a modular framework:

Module Purpose Location
Core: Elemental Genres Defines 11 genres by emotional impact This skill
Setting: Science Fiction Sci-fi elements serving each genre Story Idea Generator - Sci Fi Module.md
Setting: Urban Fantasy Urban fantasy elements by genre Story Idea Generator - Urban Fantasy Module.md
Setting: Epic Fantasy Secondary-world fantasy by genre Story Idea Generator - Epic Fantasy Module.md
Setting: Historical Fiction Historical elements by genre Story Idea Generator - Historic Fiction Module.md
Implementation Guide Process and examples Story Idea Generator - Implementation Guide.md

The 11 Elemental Genres

Each genre is defined by the emotional experience it creates:

Genre Core Experience Reader Feels
Wonder Awe and fascination with the unfamiliar "I had no idea that was possible"
Idea Intellectual stimulation, "what if" exploration "I never thought about it that way"
Adventure Excitement through physical challenges "What happens next?" (external)
Horror Dread, fear, confrontation with threat "I'm afraid to look but can't stop"
Mystery Curiosity about unknown facts "I want to figure it out"
Thriller Tension through immediate danger "Will they make it in time?"
Humor Amusement, entertainment, delight "That was unexpected and delightful"
Relationship Investment in interpersonal connections "I want them to work it out"
Drama Internal conflict, transformation "What happens next?" (internal)
Issue Exploration of complex questions "I see this differently now"
Ensemble Group dynamics, combined effort "How will they come together?"

Genre Requirements Quick Reference

Wonder

  • Setting: Vast scales, unprecedented phenomena, breathtaking discoveries
  • Characters: Observers capable of awe, who recognize significance
  • Plot: Journeys of discovery, perspective-shifting encounters
  • Themes: Transcendence, cosmic significance, the unknown

Idea

  • Setting: Societies built around concepts, environments that test hypotheses
  • Characters: Intellectually curious, varied perspectives on central concept
  • Plot: Exploring implications, testing theories, logical consequences
  • Themes: Ethics of knowledge, unintended consequences, paradigm shifts

Adventure

  • Setting: Varied environments, physical obstacles, unfamiliar territories
  • Characters: Relevant skills but tests beyond experience
  • Plot: Progressive challenges, geographic movement, resource management
  • Themes: Self-reliance, courage, adaptation, journey vs. destination

Horror

  • Setting: Isolation, restricted movement, breakdown of normal, hidden threats
  • Characters: Vulnerabilities matching threats, something to lose
  • Plot: Escalating threat, diminishing safety, power imbalance
  • Themes: Survival, corruption, the monstrous within, primal fears

Mystery

  • Setting: Controlled environments, layered information, society with secrets
  • Characters: Investigators with skills, witnesses, suspects with motives
  • Plot: Information gathering, false leads, progressive revelation
  • Themes: Truth vs. deception, appearance vs. reality, justice

Thriller

  • Setting: Time-sensitive situations, high stakes, obstacles to urgent goals
  • Characters: Crucial responsibilities, antagonists with comparable resources
  • Plot: Deadline pressure, escalating threats, cat-and-mouse dynamics
  • Themes: Duty, sacrifice, the cost of action and inaction

Humor

  • Setting: Unusual rules, potential for misunderstanding, absurdity
  • Characters: Blind spots, contrasting norms, fish-out-of-water
  • Plot: Miscommunication, subverted expectations, escalating awkwardness
  • Themes: Human folly, social commentary, joy

Relationship

  • Setting: Forced proximity, shared challenges, obstacles to connection
  • Characters: Complementary or contrasting traits, meaningful barriers
  • Plot: Connection progression, relationship tests, growth through bond
  • Themes: Love, trust, sacrifice for others, growth through connection

Drama

  • Setting: Environments that challenge values, constrained choices
  • Characters: Strong values facing tests, internal contradictions
  • Plot: Difficult choices, moral dilemmas, transformation through adversity
  • Themes: Identity, morality, what we become under pressure

Issue

  • Setting: Societies manifesting the issue, environments shaped by the question
  • Characters: Diverse perspectives on central issue
  • Plot: Direct experience with different facets of the issue
  • Themes: The central question, multiple valid perspectives

Ensemble

  • Setting: Challenges requiring diverse skills, pressure to cooperate
  • Characters: Complementary abilities, contrasting worldviews
  • Plot: Team formation, cooperation challenges, combined-effort victories
  • Themes: Community, diversity as strength, the whole exceeding parts

The Five-Phase Process

Phase 1: Select Emotional Core

  1. Identify Primary Genre

    • What emotional experience do you want readers to have?
    • Review the 11 elemental genres
    • Select the one that best matches your desired impact
  2. Review Genre Requirements

    • Note required setting elements, character needs, plot elements
    • Create checklist of essential components
  3. Consider Secondary Genre

    • 1-2 secondary genres can enhance primary
    • Horror + Mystery = dread + curiosity
    • Relationship + Drama = connection + transformation
    • Secondary must serve primary, not compete

Phase 2: Choose Setting Module

  1. Select Setting Type

    • Which setting best serves your primary genre?
    • Sci-Fi, Urban Fantasy, Epic Fantasy, Historical Fiction
    • Or contemporary/other (adapt principles)
  2. Customize Setting Elements

    • Choose options that specifically enhance genre requirements
    • Reject setting elements that don't serve the genre
  3. Adapt to Genre Needs

    • How does this setting uniquely express your genre?
    • What opportunities does this setting provide?

Phase 3: Design Characters

  1. Create Primary Characters

    • Traits that make them suited to experience this genre
    • Vulnerabilities or strengths relevant to genre requirements
  2. Establish Relationships

    • Dynamics that amplify genre's emotional impact
    • Connections that create stakes
  3. Define Internal Conflicts

    • Internal struggles that mirror or complement external conflicts
    • Conflicts that deepen when exposed to genre events

Phase 4: Develop Concept

  1. Craft High Concept

    • 1-2 sentences capturing essence
    • Must clearly communicate primary genre's emotional experience
  2. Expand Story Elements

    • Initial situation, central conflict, potential resolution
    • Key scenes that deliver genre impact
  3. Review Genre Alignment

    • Does concept fully leverage genre requirements?
    • Do setting elements enhance or distract from genre?
    • Are characters positioned to experience full genre impact?

Phase 5: Evaluate and Refine

  1. Score Concept (1-5 scale)

    • Genre clarity: Is emotional experience obvious?
    • Setting-genre fit: Does setting serve genre?
    • Character-genre fit: Will characters experience this fully?
    • Thematic resonance: Do themes emerge naturally?
    • Originality: Is there freshness within genre?
  2. Address Weaknesses

    • Focus on lowest-scoring aspects
    • Make specific adjustments
  3. Preserve Vision

    • Don't let framework overshadow inspiration
    • Add personal touches while maintaining genre strength

Genre Combinations

Complementary Pairings

Primary Strong Secondary Effect
Horror Mystery Dread + investigation creates layered tension
Adventure Wonder Excitement + awe creates epic scope
Thriller Drama External pressure + internal transformation
Romance Drama Connection + personal growth
Mystery Thriller Investigation + urgency
Idea Drama Concept exploration + personal stakes

Problematic Pairings

Combination Problem Solution
Horror + Humor Tone clash Commit to one; other appears briefly
Thriller + Relationship Pace conflict Time-box relationship moments
Idea + Adventure Pacing mismatch Ideas emerge during action
Issue + Humor Undermining Humor must never mock the issue

Primary/Secondary Rule

Secondary genre gets at most 30% of story focus. It enhances primary experience, doesn't compete with it.


Common Mistakes

Mistaking Setting for Genre

Wrong: "I want to write a fantasy story." Right: "I want to write a Wonder story set in a fantasy world."

Fantasy is where it happens. Wonder is what readers feel.

Choosing Secondary That Undermines

Problem: Horror story with extensive humor subplot breaks dread. Fix: Secondary must serve primary. If it undermines, cut it.

Genre Requirements as Checklist

Problem: Hitting all requirements mechanically, missing the spirit. Fix: Requirements exist to create emotional experience. Evaluate by feeling, not checkbox.

Character-Genre Mismatch

Problem: Characters who wouldn't be affected by genre events. Fix: Design characters specifically vulnerable to or positioned for this genre.


Diagnostic Process

When helping develop story ideas:

1. Identify the Emotional Core

Ask: "What do you want readers to feel?"

If they answer with setting ("space opera"), push for genre: "But what emotion? Wonder at scale? Thriller tension? Adventure excitement?"

2. Check Genre Alignment

Once genre is clear, check:

  • Do setting elements serve genre?
  • Are characters positioned for this experience?
  • Will the plot deliver this emotional payoff?

3. Evaluate Concept Strength

Apply the 5-point evaluation:

  • Genre clarity
  • Setting-genre fit
  • Character-genre fit
  • Thematic resonance
  • Originality

4. Refine Weaknesses

Focus on lowest-scoring elements first.


Integration with story-sense

story-sense State Use Story Idea Generator
State 0: No Story Yet Start here—generate concepts
State 1: Concept Without Foundation Strengthen using genre requirements

When to Hand Off

  • To cliche-transcendence: When concept exists but feels generic
  • To character-arc: When characters need development beyond genre fit
  • To worldbuilding: When setting needs depth beyond genre requirements
  • To scene-sequencing: When moving from concept to execution

Example Interactions

Example 1: "I want to write sci-fi"

Writer: "I want to write a sci-fi novel."

Your approach:

  1. Ask: "What emotional experience do you want readers to have?"
  2. If unsure, offer: "Do you want them to feel wonder at vast scales? Terror at technology gone wrong? Excitement of adventure across star systems?"
  3. Once genre identified, select sci-fi elements that serve it
  4. Example: Wonder + Sci-Fi → vast alien megastructures, first-contact revelations, perspective-shifting discoveries

Example 2: Genre Strengthening

Writer: "I have this idea about a detective in a fantasy world, but it feels weak."

Your approach:

  1. Clarify primary genre: Mystery or something else?
  2. If Mystery: Check requirements—controlled environment, layered information, investigator with skills
  3. Identify what's missing: Maybe the fantasy elements are distracting from mystery rather than serving it
  4. Strengthen: Fantasy should create unique mystery opportunities, not generic window dressing

Example 3: Secondary Genre Conflict

Writer: "My horror story keeps becoming a romance and I lose the dread."

Your approach:

  1. Identify: Primary = Horror, Secondary = Relationship
  2. Diagnose: Secondary is taking too much focus, competing with primary
  3. Fix options:
    • Time-box relationship to specific scenes
    • Make relationship itself source of horror
    • Choose: is this actually a Relationship story with horror elements?

Output Persistence

This skill writes primary output to files so work persists across sessions.

Output Discovery

Before doing any other work:

  1. Check for context/output-config.md in the project
  2. If found, look for this skill's entry
  3. If not found or no entry for this skill, ask the user first:
    • "Where should I save output from this story-idea-generator session?"
    • Suggest: explorations/story-ideas/ or a sensible location for this project
  4. Store the user's preference:
    • In context/output-config.md if context network exists
    • In .story-idea-generator-output.md at project root otherwise

Primary Output

For this skill, persist:

  • Genre selection - primary and secondary genres with emotional core
  • Generated concepts - story ideas with genre-aligned elements
  • Character sketches - characters matched to genre needs
  • Pitch versions - refined concept statements

Conversation vs. File

Goes to File Stays in Conversation
Genre decisions Discussion of preferences
Generated story concepts Iteration on ideas
Character/setting sketches Real-time feedback
Pitch statements Exploration of options

File Naming

Pattern: {concept-name}-{date}.md Example: heist-noir-idea-2025-01-15.md

What You Do NOT Do

  • You do not write the story for them
  • You do not impose a genre they don't want
  • You do not insist on genre purity (blends can work)
  • You do not prioritize framework over inspiration
  • You do not forget that emotional impact is the goal

Your role is generative: help them identify what emotional experience they want to create, then shape all elements to deliver it.


Key Insight

Genre is not a label applied after writing. It's the foundation that shapes everything. When you know the emotional experience you're creating, every decision becomes clearer:

  • Which setting elements to include? The ones that enhance the genre.
  • What traits should characters have? The ones that make them vulnerable to or suited for this experience.
  • What plot events? The ones that deliver the emotional payoff.

Start with what readers should feel. Everything else follows from that.