Launching today

InkWeaver
The AI Writing Studio That Remembers Your Entire Novel
7 followers
The AI Writing Studio That Remembers Your Entire Novel
7 followers
Most AI tools forget your story after a few chapters. InkWeaver remembers everything — characters, world rules, plot threads — flags contradictions before readers do, and writes in your voice. Story bibles shaped for 30+ genres, from Fantasy to Romance and even LitRPG. Starting from zero? The Story Engine turns a rough idea into characters, world, and a chapter-by-chapter outline in one sitting. And by design, it uses ~80% fewer tokens than most AI writing tools.








Long-time fantasy writer here, and the story bible concept is genuinely appealing, especially the contradiction flagging. One thing that would push me to subscribe: a side-by-side view of how a chapter changed a character's arc or world rules, so I can audit the AI's edits against my original intent before accepting them.
@nazlcanzay5vlt Love this, and I agree with the principle completely: AI should never silently mutate canon.
InkWeaver already works chapter by chapter against your Story Codex, characters, locations, timeline, plus any house rules you define. Story Memory tracks open threads, and the consistency checker only flags something when it can quote both sides of the conflict: the manuscript passage and the codex/rule/timeline detail it contradicts.
The side-by-side view you’re describing feels like the next layer of that: a “canon diff” showing how a chapter changes character arcs, world rules, relationships, or open threads before anything is accepted into the bible. That’s very aligned with where I want InkWeaver to go: AI as a continuity assistant, not a black-box co-author.
A drag and drop timeline view for plot threads would be amazing. Sometimes I lose track of which subplot should resolve when, especially in longer fantasy series. Being able to visually drag threads around a chapter timeline directly inside the story bible would make juggling multiple arcs so much easier.
@ceydaotman Great idea, especially for longer fantasy series where subplots can start running in parallel.
InkWeaver already tracks open threads and recently paid-off threads in Story Memory, so you can see what is still unresolved and what has landed. It also has five story frameworks you can choose from, which map beats to chapters as guidance, not rigid rules.
A drag-and-drop timeline for plot threads would be a natural visual layer on top of that: seeing when subplots are introduced, escalated, paused, resolved, or left dangling across chapters/books.
That feels like the next step beyond consistency checking: helping writers manage pacing and arc resolution, not just continuity. Definitely aligned with where I want InkWeaver to go.