Creative
Micro Fiction Prompt Generator
Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.
A micro fiction prompt generator does more than hand you a topic — it gives you a scenario with built-in tension, a craft constraint, and an emotional target to hit, so the blank page becomes a solvable problem rather than an open void. Writers use it to practice the most demanding compression in prose: fitting a complete narrative arc into 50, 100, or 200 words, or attempting the legendary six-word story form. Each prompt is structured to force real decisions — what to cut, where to start, what the last line must earn. That pressure is exactly what builds transferable skills in scene economy, precise word choice, and endings that resonate rather than simply stop.
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How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Select your target word limit from the dropdown — start with 100 words if you're unsure.
- Click generate to receive a scenario, a creative constraint, and an emotional target.
- Read all three elements before writing; note how the constraint and emotional target interact with the scenario.
- Write your story to completion before generating a new prompt, even if the draft is rough.
- Copy the finished story and save it — then generate a new prompt for your next session.
Use Cases
- •Running a timed 10-minute warm-up sprint before drafting a longer short story or novel chapter
- •Submitting to journals like 100 Word Story or Vestal Review that enforce strict word caps
- •Practicing six-word story form for X (Twitter) micro fiction threads or Instagram writing challenges
- •Running a shared classroom or workshop exercise where every student solves the same constraint
- •Building a daily writing habit without committing to a full scene or chapter each session
Tips
- →Use the constraint as your first editing tool: if a sentence doesn't serve the constraint, cut it before anything else.
- →When the scenario feels too familiar, lean entirely on the emotional target — it will pull the story somewhere unexpected.
- →Generate three prompts at once and pick the one that makes you slightly uncomfortable — discomfort usually signals unexplored territory.
- →Pair the 50-word limit with a constraint involving dialogue; fitting a spoken exchange into 50 words teaches compression faster than any other exercise.
- →Reuse a previously generated scenario but change the emotional target — comparing the two drafts reveals your default storytelling habits.
- →If your story hits the word limit before the turn, your setup is too long — cut the first sentence and see if the story still works.
FAQ
how do I write a complete story in 100 words
Start mid-action, cut all setup, and use one sharp sensory detail instead of general description. Your ending needs a small but decisive turn — a reversal, a withheld fact, or an image that means more than it literally shows. Read the draft aloud and remove every word that doesn't change the meaning or rhythm of its sentence.
what word limit should I pick for micro fiction practice
If you're new to the form, start at 100 words — tight enough to force cuts, but with just enough room for a setup and a turn. Once stories feel natural at that length, drop to 50 words, where you'll instantly see which parts of your writing are habits rather than choices. The six-word format is best treated as a structural puzzle, not a first draft.
what's the difference between micro fiction and flash fiction
Flash fiction typically runs 300 to 1,000 words and can support developed character beats and scene transitions. Micro fiction lives under 300 words — often under 100 — where structure compresses to a single moment with a turn. Both demand economy, but micro fiction is more ruthless: there's no room for a sentence that only moves plot without also doing emotional work.