State can evolve with the story
Track motives, emotional state, location, revealed secrets, injuries, and status notes so characters carry the story forward instead of resetting between scenes.


A story continuity tool for writers who do not want scenes to forget what happened.
Track changing motives, injuries, relationship shifts, status notes, and consequences so later scenes remember the damage, promises, and pressure already in play.
A scene can read well on its own and still weaken the larger book if the story forgets what a character already suffered, promised, revealed, or destroyed. That is where continuity problems start to compound.
Fictensity is built to reduce that drift. Character state and consequence tracking help writers keep later scenes aligned with the emotional, physical, and relational reality the story has already established.
Track motives, emotional state, location, revealed secrets, injuries, and status notes so characters carry the story forward instead of resetting between scenes.
Physical, emotional, social, legal, or material consequences can remain attached to the character instead of getting buried in old chat history.
Continuity support is useful because it is still writer-controlled. Suggested updates can be reviewed instead of silently mutating the story behind your back.
This page is for fiction writers working on stories where people are meant to change, suffer, adapt, and remember what the plot has done to them.
Track what a character wants now, what they lost, what was exposed, and what their body or position can realistically carry into the next scene.
Use continuity tools when serial fiction, branching sessions, or complex cast dynamics make memory alone too fragile to trust.
It tracks evolving story state and consequences inside the writing workspace so later scenes can stay aligned with what already happened.
No. It is also about how injuries, motives, relationship shifts, and consequences continue to matter after the first scene where they appear.
Yes. Continuity suggestions are reviewable, so the writer stays in control of what becomes part of the story record.
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