Creative
Story Arc Generator
Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.
A story arc generator gives writers a complete four-stage outline — setup, conflict, climax, and resolution — matched to a specific genre before a single draft word is written. Choose from seven genres including Fantasy, Thriller, Horror, and Romance, and set how many arcs you want in one pass. Each result reflects the conventions readers expect: a Mystery arc opens with a crime and builds toward an unmasking; a Sci-Fi arc might hinge on a technological threat and a last-stand decision. Use the output as a strict skeleton, invert it for a subversive take, or strip just the conflict premise and write your own resolution. Multiple arcs per session let you compare directions before committing.
Loading usage…
Free forever — no account required
How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Open the genre dropdown and select the genre that matches your project or the style you want to explore.
- Set the count field to how many distinct arcs you want — three is a useful default for comparing options.
- Click the generate button and read through each arc's four stages: setup, conflict, climax, and resolution.
- Identify the arc whose conflict and climax excite you most, then copy it to your writing document or notes app.
- Use the four stages as chapter or act anchors, filling in your characters, world details, and specific scenes around each stage.
Use Cases
- •Mapping a NaNoWriMo novel outline before the Day 1 sprint starts
- •Generating three Romance arcs to compare emotional-barrier types before drafting chapter one
- •Building a subplot arc for a secondary character in a multi-POV Thriller manuscript
- •Rapid-pitching a Horror short film concept to a co-writer using the four-stage breakdown
- •Producing six distinct arcs for a fiction workshop so students each develop a different premise
Tips
- →Generate arcs in a genre adjacent to yours — a thriller arc can inject pacing urgency into a literary fiction outline.
- →If two generated arcs both appeal to you, assign one to the protagonist and one to the antagonist for mirrored dramatic structure.
- →The resolution stage often reveals the story's theme — read it first to check whether the implied message fits your intentions.
- →For short stories under 5,000 words, treat the conflict stage alone as the entire story and compress setup into the opening paragraph.
- →Run the same genre three times and collect only the climax stages — comparing them shows the range of emotional peaks available to you.
- →When the generated setup feels clichéd, keep the conflict and climax exactly as written — unusual conflicts inside familiar setups often produce the most original stories.
FAQ
how does the genre setting actually change the story arc output
Each genre draws from a different pool of stakes, conflict drivers, and resolution types tuned to reader expectations. A Fantasy arc might pivot on a prophecy or world-ending threat, while a Mystery arc opens with a crime and closes with an unmasking. Switching genres produces structurally distinct ideas, not just different vocabulary.
can I use a generated arc if I already have a story idea
Yes — generate several arcs in your genre and look for a conflict or climax stage that fits your existing characters. You can also use a generated arc to stress-test your current outline: if your plot diverges sharply from every result, that often points to a structural gap worth fixing before you're deep into a draft.
how many arcs should I generate at once
Three is a practical default — enough variety to identify which conflict type excites you most without decision fatigue. For classroom or workshop use, generating five or six gives a group enough distinct options so participants can each develop a different arc without overlap.