Popular directions to customize
Start from a familiar trope, then bend the protagonist, rules, and next chapter toward your taste.
Romantasy
Forbidden magic, court politics, fated bonds, and choices that can change a kingdom.
Enemies to lovers
Rivalry, tension, betrayal, and the moment hate becomes harder to escape.
Second chance
A past life, a broken promise, or one mistake you finally get to rewrite.
Paranormal romance
Vampires, werewolves, soul bonds, curses, and attraction that comes with a price.
Mystery thriller
Secrets, suspects, unreliable clues, and choices that decide who lives.
LitRPG adventure
Stats, quests, dungeons, rewards, and rules that turn every choice into progression.
Why the story can keep going
Your taste stays in the story
Slow-burn romance, dangerous attraction, high-pressure choices, court schemes, or nonstop progression: future chapters keep following the direction you set.
The rules do not vanish
Abilities, relationships, taboos, and world rules are carried forward so the story does not collapse after the hook.
Every chapter can turn
Continue reading, add a character, raise the stakes, change a relationship, or push the plot into another genre.
Genres readers often start with
Pick one as the first constraint, then change the details in the studio.
Questions readers usually ask
Is this a personalized novel or a text adventure?
Both. You can read chapter by chapter like a novel, or make choices at key moments and let the branch continue.
Can I define the protagonist and world rules?
Yes. You can set the protagonist, personality, power, relationship lines, taboos, and the kind of plot you want or do not want.
What genres work best?
Romantasy, enemies to lovers, second-chance romance, paranormal romance, mystery thriller, LitRPG adventure, isekai, and text adventures all fit well.
Is every story a fixed template?
No. Openings are entry points. After that, the story can keep changing based on your choices and preferences.
Start with an opening, then make it yours
You do not need a full outline. A trope, a protagonist, or a single scene is enough.
Customize a story





