Story Structure Builder
Description
Story Structure Builder is an AI-powered creative writing assistant that helps authors, screenwriters, and content creators construct compelling narratives. From initial concept to detailed plot outlines, this skill guides you through proven storytelling frameworks while maintaining your unique creative voice.
Features
- Multiple Story Frameworks: Apply classic and modern narrative structures
- Character Development: Create multi-dimensional characters with clear arcs
- Plot Point Planning: Map key story beats and turning points
- Scene Construction: Build scenes with tension and purpose
- Theme Integration: Weave themes naturally throughout your story
How to Use
-
Define Your Story Concept
- Genre selection
- Target audience
- Core premise
- Central conflict
-
Choose Your Framework
- Three-Act Structure
- Hero's Journey
- Save the Cat
- Five-Act Structure (Shakespearean)
- Kishōtenketsu
-
Develop Story Elements
- Character profiles and arcs
- World-building details
- Plot outline
- Scene breakdown
-
Refine and Expand
- Add subplot structures
- Develop supporting characters
- Create dialogue hooks
- Identify theme moments
Example
Input: "Create a story structure for a mystery novel with a detective protagonist"
Output:
# Story Structure: "The Silent Witness"
## 📖 Genre: Mystery/Thriller
## Target Audience: Adults 25-55
## Word Count: 80,000-90,000 words
---
## 🎭 Character Profiles
### Protagonist: Detective Sarah Chen
- **Backstory**: Former homicide detective, transferred after controversial case
- **Flaw**: Pushes people away, struggles with trust
- **Want**: Justice for the innocent
- **Need**: To let others in, accept help
- **Arc**: Isolation → Reluctant partnership → Team trust
### Antagonist: [Reveal mid-story]
- **Motive**: [Hidden until Act 3]
- **Method**: [Serial element linked to protagonist's past]
---
## 📊 Three-Act Structure
### ACT 1: Setup (Pages 1-30)
| Beat | Description | Page |
|------|-------------|------|
| Opening Image | Crime scene, darkness | 1 |
| Theme Stated | "Justice isn't always black and white" | 15 |
| Setup | Detective introduced, her isolation | 1-20 |
| Catalyst | New case arrives - linked to past | 25 |
| Debate | Can she handle this alone? | 25-30 |
### ACT 2A: Rising Action - Fun & Games (Pages 30-55)
| Beat | Description | Page |
|------|-------------|------|
| Partner Assigned | Unwanted ally introduced | 32 |
| B-Story Begins | Personal life subplot | 35 |
| Midpoint | First major breakthrough/reversal | 45 |
| Bad Guys Close In | Threats escalate | 50-55 |
### ACT 2B: Rising Action - Bad Guys Close In (Pages 55-75)
| Beat | Description | Page |
|------|-------------|------|
| All Is Lost | Protagonist fails, mentor受伤 | 65 |
| Dark Night | Lowest point, almost quits | 70-75 |
| Whiff of Death | Fake-out victory | 75 |
### ACT 3: Resolution (Pages 75-90)
| Beat | Description | Page |
|------|-------------|------|
| Break Into Three | New plan forms | 78 |
| Finale | Confrontation at [location] | 80-85 |
| Final Image | Justice served, new beginning | 90 |
---
## 🔑 Key Plot Points
1. **Inciting Incident** (Page 12): Victim found - someone Sarah failed to protect
2. **First Turning Point** (Page 30): Case connects to cold case
3. **Midpoint** (Page 45): Witness reveals crucial information
4. **Second Turning Point** (Page 60): Real antagonist revealed
5. **Climax** (Page 85): Final confrontation
---
## 🎯 Scene Construction Checklist
- [ ] Every scene has conflict
- [ ] Every scene advances plot OR develops character
- [ ] Dialogue reveals character (not exposition)
- [ ] Tension increases toward midpoint
- [ ] Red herrings planted before Chapter 5
---
## 💡 Theme Moments
- Chapter 3: "The truth doesn't care if you're ready"
- Chapter 12: Partnership scene
- Chapter 20: Flashback to original case
- Chapter 25: Theme confirmed through action
- Final Chapter: Theme illustrated through change
Story Frameworks Available
Three-Act Structure
Classic beginning-middle-end with clear turning points
Hero's Journey (12 Steps)
Joseph Campbell's monomyth framework for epic narratives
Save the Cat (Beat Sheet)
Blake Snyder's 15-beat structure for screenwriting
Five-Act Structure
Shakespearean dramatic structure with complications
Kishōtenketsu
Four-act East Asian narrative without conflict
Tips
- Use framework as a guide, not a prison
- Let characters drive plot decisions
- Plant seeds early for later payoffs
- Build toward your climax progressively
- Trust the rewrite process