Make it yours

Create your own love story

The hardest part of writing a love story isn't the prose. It's knowing where to start. Most blank pages stay blank because the writer hasn't decided who the people are, where they meet, or why this moment is the moment.

Describe a charged scene in one or two sentences — who they are, where they are, what's already in the air — and a chapter writes itself around it. You can keep going for as long as you want. She remembers what you wrote last time.

Start from one of these

A short method

Pick two people. One sentence each. What do they want? What are they afraid of? You don't need names yet.

Pick a room. A train, a hotel, an office, a wedding. Rooms make stories. Empty space doesn't.

Pick what already happened. The best openings start mid-tension — something has been building, something is about to give.

Don't outline the ending. The story will take you somewhere you didn't plan, and that's the point.

Common questions

How long should the prompt be?

One or two sentences is plenty. The best prompts leave room for the writing to find the surprise.

Can I add details mid-story?

Yes — just write what happens next. The system carries every detail forward, including small things you mentioned three chapters ago.

Will the characters stay?

Yes. Once you save a character from a story, you can talk to them or write new stories with them. They remember everything.

Or browse the curated scenes →