Creative
Surrealist Scene Generator
Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.
A surrealist scene generator conjures a dreamlike tableau — an impossible place, an uncanny figure, and a strange event — to spark surreal, experimental writing, like a flooded library lit by floating candles where it begins to rain upward. Writers, poets, and artists use surrealism to escape literal logic and reach the uncanny truths that live beneath it, but a blank page rarely turns strange on command. This tool combines vivid, impossible images into an instant scene you can dive into. Click to generate and copy the prompt. It is ideal for breaking writer's block, practising imagery, sparking a poem or flash fiction, or fuelling dream-logic art. Because the parts combine into a vast pool of impossible images, you can generate scene after scene until one unsettles, delights, or haunts you enough to write.
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How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Click Generate to draw a scene.
- Read the setting, figure, and event.
- Write without explaining the logic.
- Copy the prompt or draw again.
Use Cases
- •Breaking writer's block
- •Practising vivid imagery
- •Sparking a poem or flash fiction
- •Fuelling dream-logic art
- •Exploring surreal writing
Tips
- →Treat the impossible as normal.
- →Anchor strangeness in real feeling.
- →Don't over-explain the dream.
- →Draw again for a new image.
FAQ
how do i write surreal fiction
Treat the impossible as ordinary. Do not explain the dream-logic; let characters move through the strangeness as if it were normal. The power of surrealism comes from emotional truth, so anchor the weird images in real feeling.
what is the scene for
It is a starting image, not a plot. Use the setting, figure, and event as a doorway, then follow your imagination wherever it leads — into a poem, a story, a painting, or a dream you write down.
can i get another scene
Yes. Generate again for a new place, figure, and event. The parts combine into far more scenes than appear at once, so you can keep drawing until one is strange enough to pull you in.