50-ish Prompts Later... and It All Starts with a Card
I've now created over 50 prompts, Iβve realized something:
I donβt just find prompts.
Every idea youβve seen here didnβt start as a fully-formed concept. It all starts from a card.
If you havenβt noticed, weekdays are story prompts. Saturdays are for my world builders, and Sundays are for those who want to expand or flesh out lore.
Hereβs what my process usually looks like for story prompts:
1. I determine where I am in my prompt-making cycle.
I cycle between the different prompts laid out by the creators of The Story Engine Deck:
Simple Prompts (Story Seed, Character Concept, Item-Driven Prompt, or Setting-Driven Prompt)
Complex Prompts (Circle of Fate, A Clash of Wills, or A Soul Divided).
Once Iβve determined the type of prompt Iβm creating, I follow its structure as a guide.
2. I let fate guide my hands.
This is the easiest stepβand where the cards come into play.
I draw the cards needed for the prompt, following the guide.
3. Then, I take it from here.
This is where I truly create the promptβand, to me, the hardest step.
The cards give me the pieces, but itβs up to me to connect them into something meaningful.
Each card has multiple options, and Iβll rotate cards or tuck them beneath others to shape the direction of the prompt.
I take those seemingly random elements and turn them into something intentionalβsomething unique and compelling.
Every prompt is drawn from my own aesthetics and creative instincts.
I keep prompts clear, but open enough for interpretationβ
not too long, not too specific.
Just enough to guide, but not control.
My goal is always the same: to build something that feels like it needs to be written.
If youβd like to see this process in action, Iβll be sharing a video in the futureβso stay tuned.
Iβll also be revealing my process for World Creation after the 60th prompt, and Lore Creation after the 70th.
What I love most about using these cards is watching something simple transform into something that demands to be written.
If youβve used any of these prompts, Iβd genuinely love to see what youβve created. Every story that comes from them will be completely differentβand thatβs what makes this so exciting.
This blog started as a way to share ideas with writers and artists.
I hope to grow it into something more.