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Story Genre & Setting Combo Generator

Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.

A story genre and setting combo generator collides two unexpected genres with a vivid setting to spark original story ideas. The freshest premises rarely come from a single familiar idea — they come from the friction between two that do not obviously belong together, dropped into a specific place. This generator does that colliding for you, pairing genres and a setting into a combination with built-in tension you can develop in your own direction. It is a fast cure for a blank page, a daily writing prompt, or a way to break out of the obvious story you keep reaching for. Generate a batch, keep the combinations that make you lean in, and follow whichever sparks a question you want to answer. Because it runs instantly in your browser for free, you can generate endless combos and chase the ones that excite you, with no cost, signup, or limit.

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How to use

  1. Choose your options above
  2. Click Generate
  3. Copy your result

Use Cases

  • Generating five NaNoWriMo premises in under a minute to pick the most compelling one
  • Finding a unique short story angle for a submission to a literary magazine or anthology call
  • Giving creative writing students a constrained prompt to practice genre convention and subversion
  • Building a tabletop RPG campaign setting that blends two unexpected tones for player surprise
  • Breaking writer's block mid-project by exploring a genre pivot for a stuck manuscript

FAQ

how do you actually write a genre mashup without it falling apart

Anchor the story in one primary genre so readers have familiar expectations, then use the second genre as a disruptive layer that creates contrast or irony. The friction between the two — a heist plot inside a gothic romance, for example — is what makes the premise feel fresh rather than unfocused.

what makes a story setting feel vivid and original

A setting earns its place when it has rules and limitations that actively shape what characters can and cannot do. If the setting could be swapped out without changing the plot, it isn't doing enough work — tie at least one core conflict directly to the place.

can I use these genre combos for screenwriting or only prose

These combos work for any narrative format — prose, screenplay, graphic novel, or tabletop RPG. Genre and setting are format-agnostic starting points; the combo just gives you a tonal and structural frame to build from.