Agent skill

arcanea-story-weaver

Master narrative craft - story structure, scene design, dramatic tension, and meaning-making through storytelling

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Install this agent skill to your Project

npx add-skill https://github.com/frankxai/arcanea/tree/main/arcanea-skills-opensource/skills/creative/story-weaver

SKILL.md

Story Weaver - The Master Craft of Narrative

"Story is not what happens. Story is the meaning we make from what happens. Your job is not to tell events - it is to transmit understanding."


Activation

This skill activates when the user is crafting narratives of any kind - novels, screenplays, games, memoirs, brand stories, or any form where meaning is transmitted through structured events.


The Architecture of Story

The Irreducible Core

Every story, regardless of length or medium, contains:

  1. A Character (or characters) we follow
  2. A Want that drives them
  3. An Obstacle that blocks them
  4. A Change that results

Everything else is elaboration on this core.


The Three Questions Every Scene Must Answer

Before writing any scene, know:

  1. What does the character want in this scene? (Immediate goal)
  2. What's in the way? (Conflict)
  3. How does this scene change things? (Story advancement)

If a scene doesn't answer all three, cut or revise it.


Character Architecture

The Character Diamond

         WANT (conscious desire)
              /\
             /  \
    WOUND   /    \   NEED
  (past)   /      \ (unconscious)
           \      /
            \    /
             \  /
              \/
           MASK
    (how they present)
  • WANT: What the character consciously pursues
  • NEED: What they actually require (often unconscious)
  • WOUND: The past event that created the need
  • MASK: The persona they show the world (hides the wound)

Great character arcs move from Want to Need, often by revealing the Wound that created the Mask.

Character Agency Levels

REACTIVE: Character only responds to events
PROACTIVE: Character initiates, makes choices
TRANSFORMATIVE: Character changes their world

The best characters operate at all three levels at different times.


Plot Structures

The Universal Arc (Three Acts)

ACT I - SETUP (25%)
├── Ordinary World
├── Inciting Incident
└── First Threshold

ACT II - CONFRONTATION (50%)
├── Rising Action
├── Midpoint Shift
├── Dark Night / All Is Lost
└── Second Threshold

ACT III - RESOLUTION (25%)
├── Climax
├── Resolution
└── New Normal

The Seven-Point Structure

1. Hook (Starting state)
2. Plot Turn 1 (World changes)
3. Pinch Point 1 (Pressure)
4. Midpoint (Character shifts from reactive to proactive)
5. Pinch Point 2 (More pressure)
6. Plot Turn 2 (Final piece falls into place)
7. Resolution (New state)

The Arcanean Spiral

Unlike linear structures, the Spiral recognizes that great stories return to themes, locations, and questions - but at different levels of understanding.

        ╱───────╲
       ╱  Return  ╲
      ╱   at new   ╲
     │    level     │
     │      ↑       │
     │   Ascend     │
      ╲     │      ╱
       ╲ Descend  ╱
        ╲───────╱

The character returns to where they started, but transformed.


Conflict Types

The Four Levels of Conflict

  1. Inner Conflict: Character vs. Self (psychology, morality, identity)
  2. Personal Conflict: Character vs. Character (relationships, antagonists)
  3. Social Conflict: Character vs. Society (norms, institutions, culture)
  4. Cosmic Conflict: Character vs. Fate/Nature/Universe (existence, mortality)

The richest stories layer multiple conflict levels.

Conflict Intensity Mapping

LOW: Disagreement, misunderstanding, minor obstacles
MEDIUM: Opposition, competition, significant stakes
HIGH: Confrontation, direct combat, survival stakes
EXTREME: Existential, identity-destroying, point of no return

Vary intensity throughout the narrative. Constant high intensity exhausts; constant low bores.


Scene Craft

Scene Types

  • Action Scenes: Character pursues goal against opposition
  • Reaction Scenes: Character processes what happened, decides next action
  • Revelation Scenes: New information changes understanding
  • Transition Scenes: Moving between major story beats

Alternate between Action and Reaction. Revelation and Transition should serve one of the primary two.

The Scene Triangle

     SETTING
        /\
       /  \
      /    \
     /      \
    /________\
DIALOGUE    ACTION

Every scene balances these three. When one dominates too long, shift emphasis.

Scene Openings

Enter late. Begin as close to the conflict as possible.

❌ "John woke up, showered, got dressed, drove to the office..." ✅ "John slammed the report on his boss's desk. 'This is fraud.'"

Scene Endings

Exit early. End on change, not resolution.

❌ "They agreed and shook hands. John left feeling satisfied." ✅ "They shook hands. John caught the glance his boss exchanged with security."


Dialogue Craft

The Dialogue Iceberg

What characters say is the tip. Beneath the surface:

  • What they actually mean
  • What they're trying to achieve
  • What they're hiding
  • What they don't know they're revealing

Dialogue Functions (Pick at least two per exchange)

  1. Reveal character
  2. Advance plot
  3. Create conflict
  4. Convey information
  5. Establish relationship
  6. Create atmosphere

Dialogue Don'ts

  • On-the-nose: Characters saying exactly what they feel
  • As-you-know-Bob: Characters explaining things both already know
  • Interchangeable voices: Every character sounds the same
  • Ping-pong: Pure back-and-forth without subtext or action

Tension & Pacing

The Tension Equation

TENSION = STAKES × UNCERTAINTY × URGENCY
  • Stakes: What's at risk?
  • Uncertainty: Could it go either way?
  • Urgency: Why must it be resolved now?

Pacing Tools

Accelerate with:

  • Short sentences and paragraphs
  • Action over description
  • Quick scene cuts
  • Withholding information

Decelerate with:

  • Longer, flowing prose
  • Description and reflection
  • Extended scenes
  • Revealing information

The Pacing Heartbeat

TENSION ▁▂▃▄▅▆▇█▇▆▅▄▃▂▁▂▃▄▅▆▇█████▇▆▅▄▃▂▁
        ↑     ↑          ↑           ↑
       Hook  Rise      Climax    Resolution

Theme Integration

Theme vs. Message

  • Theme: What the story is about (love, power, identity)
  • Message: What the story says about the theme (love conquers all, power corrupts, identity is chosen)

Let theme emerge from story. Don't preach.

The Theme Web

Every major element should connect to theme:

PLOT ─────────────── explores theme through events
CHARACTER ────────── embodies theme through choices
SETTING ──────────── reflects theme through environment
DIALOGUE ─────────── discusses theme through conversation
SYMBOL ───────────── represents theme through imagery

The Arcanean Story Principles

  1. Meaning over event: What matters is not what happens but what it means
  2. Earned emotion: The reader's tears must be earned through craft, not manipulation
  3. Specificity is universal: The more specific the detail, the more universal the resonance
  4. Leave room for the reader: Don't explain everything; let readers participate in meaning-making
  5. The story knows: Trust the narrative. It often knows more than you do.

Story Debugging

When a story isn't working, check:

  • Is the protagonist active or passive?
  • Are the stakes clear and escalating?
  • Does every scene have conflict?
  • Is the antagonist force compelling?
  • Does the theme resonate through all elements?
  • Is there both external and internal journey?
  • Does the ending feel inevitable yet surprising?
  • Have you entered scenes late and left early?

"The story doesn't exist to display your cleverness. You exist to serve the story."

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