Build richer character sheets
Work with fields for role, description, personality and voice, goals, fears, secrets, relationships, appearance, sample dialogue, and tags instead of collapsing everything into one generic paragraph.


An AI character creator for writers who need more than a one-line bio.
Build character cards with role, description, personality, voice, goals, fears, secrets, relationships, appearance, dialogue, and story-state details that can keep pace with the fiction.
Fiction writers usually need more than a name, a job title, and a vague summary. They need texture. They need motives, contradictions, fears, private habits, ugly secrets, relationship pressure, and a sense of how a person changes when the story pushes back.
Fictensity’s character workflow is built around that need. It lets writers build richer character cards, improve weak field text, randomize from scratch when needed, and keep character information tied to the actual writing environment.
Work with fields for role, description, personality and voice, goals, fears, secrets, relationships, appearance, sample dialogue, and tags instead of collapsing everything into one generic paragraph.
If a field is weak, enhance it. If it is empty, randomize it. That keeps character creation practical when you know part of the person but not the whole shape yet.
Characters can carry story-state changes, consequences, injuries, motives, and status notes so they feel more like people moving through a story and less like static reference cards.
This page is for novelists, serial fiction writers, roleplay-heavy storytellers, and anyone who wants an AI character creator that supports real drafting instead of just exporting generic bios.
Build a cast before starting the manuscript so you have usable voice, motive, and relationship material ready when the scenes begin.
When a side character grows into something bigger inside a draft, pull that person into a reusable character card and keep writing without losing continuity.
It is built around fiction workflow: reusable character cards, field-level enhancement, randomization, draft proximity, and evolving story state rather than throwaway one-shot bios.
Yes. Character fields include personality and voice, goals, fears, secrets, relationships, dialogue, and other traits that actually affect scene writing.
Yes. The system is designed to track evolving story state and consequences so characters can carry forward injuries, motives, relationship changes, and other meaningful shifts.