How do I write a story with AI?
Start with a premise, genre, protagonist, conflict, and desired ending. Ask for an outline first, then draft one scene at a time and revise for voice, pacing, and clarity.
Writing
Turn a premise into outlines, scenes, character arcs, and polished story drafts. Use the guidance below to shape a clear prompt, then open AI chat in BlendSpace to refine the result with the model you prefer.
An AI story writer is a writing tool that helps turn ideas into plots, outlines, scenes, characters, and draft prose. It can support brainstorming, revision, and structure while leaving creative judgment with the writer.
Good fiction needs more than a clever premise. Writers have to manage character goals, conflict, pacing, point of view, tone, and revision. BlendSpace helps you move from idea to outline, from outline to scene, and from rough scene to stronger draft while keeping each step editable in chat.
Start with a premise, genre, protagonist, conflict, and desired ending. Ask for an outline first, then draft one scene at a time and revise for voice, pacing, and clarity.
Long-context chat models are best for story writing because they can track plot, characters, and style across multiple scenes.
You can test story prompts in BlendSpace with free signup credits during public beta, then continue with purchased credits or a subscription.
AI can generate options quickly and help with structure, but the human writer should choose the theme, voice, emotional truth, and final edits.
Give the model constraints: genre, point of view, scene goal, conflict, tone, and what should change by the end of the scene.
Good for nuanced prose, character voice, and careful revision of longer drafts.
Strong for outlining, brainstorming, scene expansion, and fast style iteration.
Useful for long-context story planning and comparing multiple structural options.
Ask for a beat outline before requesting full prose.
Revise one dimension at a time: voice, conflict, pacing, or sensory detail.
Keep a short story bible with character facts and paste it into later prompts.
Replace the bracketed parts with your own product, audience, style, or scene details. Shorter prompts work well for quick exploration; more specific prompts are better for production direction.
Write a structured outline for a [genre] story about [premise]. Include the main character, central conflict, turning points, ending, and emotional arc.
Write the opening scene for a [genre] story. Start with a strong hook, reveal the setting through action, and end with a question that makes the reader continue.
Revise this scene to make [character name] sound more [voice traits]. Keep the plot events the same, but improve dialogue, subtext, and pacing.
Open BlendSpace, paste one of the prompts, then iterate with chat, image, or video models in the same workspace.