Account-owned writing sessions
Your sessions live inside your account so you can return to story work later instead of losing it to temporary chat state or one-off prompt experiments.


A private AI writing app for fiction writers who do better work with room to think.
Fictensity keeps writing sessions inside an authenticated account and is designed as a private workspace for drafting sensitive, difficult, rough, or emotionally loaded story material.
Writers do not always begin with polished material. They test rough scenes, uncomfortable ideas, broken chapters, sharp emotional turns, and versions that may never survive revision. A private AI writing app is useful because it gives that process somewhere consistent to happen.
Fictensity is designed as an authenticated workspace with saved sessions, draft continuity, and server-side billing controls so the writing environment feels more like a personal tool and less like a disposable public chatbot tab.
Your sessions live inside your account so you can return to story work later instead of losing it to temporary chat state or one-off prompt experiments.
A private workspace matters when the material is unfinished, emotionally raw, morally complex, or simply too early in the drafting process to show anybody else.
Authentication, billing, subscription state, and usage metering are handled on the server so the core access controls are not delegated to client-side guesswork.
This page is for fiction writers who care about privacy, saved sessions, account-based access, and a writing workflow that can handle difficult material without turning the workspace into a mess.
Save scene experiments, broken starts, alternate takes, and emotionally risky passages inside a workspace you can come back to later when the draft is ready for revision.
Use one account to manage saved sessions, usage limits, billing status, and access instead of spreading workflow pieces across separate tools and temporary logs.
It uses authenticated accounts, saved sessions, server-side billing and usage controls, and a product structure built around a writer-owned workspace rather than a disposable public chat surface.
Because early drafts, dark material, sexual tension, grief, obsession, betrayal, and morally ugly scenes are often easier to write when the workspace feels contained and consistent.
No. It works alongside them. A serious writing product still needs subscription state, usage limits, and account gating that hold up cleanly on the server side.