Your desires come to life, one choice at a time
Space station, cyberpunk megacity, Martian colony. The AI holds a coherent, technically credible world, chapter after chapter.
SF demands a solid world. Your Scenario keeps the technical consistency: the rules of your world (FTL travel, AI, genetic mutations, power structures) are remembered and respected. Internal contradictions — the great pitfall of the genre — are avoided thanks to a persistent summary.
You choose the kind of future (realistic near-future, space opera, noir cyberpunk, political dystopia, post-singularity) and the central concept that makes your world different from ours. The AI builds the rest and offers you three choices per chapter — or lets you write your own action.
The tone adapts: exploratory optimism (Star Trek, Andy Weir), oppressive noir (Blade Runner, Alien), action (Mass Effect). You can also shift register along the way.
So many starting points — the AI adapts to whichever one you pick.
Ships, galactic empires, multi-species crews. Space as a field of adventure.
Dystopian megacities, corpocracies, implants, hackers. The near-future that reeks of rain and neon.
Five years out, ten years out. Just one more technology — and the consequences it sets off.
The AIs have surpassed humanity. You survive in a world that owes you nothing anymore.
An alien ship, a strange signal, a relic from elsewhere. The vertigo of the unknown.
A new planet, a colony taking shape. Exploration, survival, political tensions.
Sample opening chapters.
The AI writes in the first person, building on every choice you've made so far.
The alarm stopped a minute ago. In the silence, all you can hear is the captain's ragged breathing. On the main screen, the asteroid's trajectory. Three hours. Evacuation is impossible — not enough pods left. Thirty-six people aboard, twenty seats in the capsules.
Live this genre with someone.
Two protagonists, two players. Each one chooses on their turn; the text unfolds accordingly. Here's how a typical exchange plays out.
The traitor is somewhere aboard. Rin has cut the remote access — he can no longer flee via the pods. But he can still sabotage.
Alarms scream in the engine room. A figure in an emergency suit appears on camera Beta-3. Orso is on the bridge, hands on the console.
The figure runs toward the emergency airlock. Rin is three corridors away. Orso has his hand on the button that opens — or seals — the airlock. Three seconds.
Androids, pilots, hackers, scientists — characters drawn from every sub-genre of SF.
On the great classics of the genre (lightspeed, AI, cyberpunk, genetics), yes. It stays consistent with the rules of your world once they're set. On very sharp hard SF (precise orbital mechanics, advanced biology), it simplifies — which is normal for a narrative.
Yes. Your Scenario is a text role-playing game (RP) where the AI handles the narration and the characters in real time. You decide, it writes. Unlike a classic message-based RP, every chapter is built around your choices and remembers everything that came before.
You describe in a few words the beginning of the story you have in mind. The AI writes the first chapter and offers you three choices to steer what comes next. With each choice, a new chapter is written, taking into account everything decided so far. You can also write your own action freely.
Yes. You get free credits when you sign up, and each chapter costs a few credits. Paid plans are available for heavy use.
Yes. Your scenarios belong to you. You can share them via a link if you want to; otherwise they stay strictly private.
Your Scenario spans twelve worlds. Each with its own codes, atmosphere, and archetypes.
Start for free. No credit card required.
Start a science fiction scenario