Brainstorming Capture
Capture story brainstorming in working note format that preserves creative freedom.
Core Principle
Record brainstorming WITHOUT:
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Over-elaborating on what was stated
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Mixing user statements with AI suggestions unmarked
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Inventing excessive details
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Constraining future creativity
AI suggestions are valuable but must be clearly marked and kept minimal.
Types of Brainstorming
This skill handles all brainstorming types:
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Story/plot directions (general narrative exploration)
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Chapter structure and beats (planning individual chapters)
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Worldbuilding and lore (magic systems, cultures, history, geography)
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Character development (motivations, arcs, relationships)
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Timeline and continuity (chronology, contradictions)
All share core principles (minimal capture, source tagging, preserve vagueness). See references/ for specialized guidance:
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chapter-planning.md
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Capturing beat and scene exploration
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worldbuilding.md
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Exploring fictional world elements (use web search for research)
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character-development.md
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Exploring motivations, arcs, relationships
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continuity-timeline.md
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Timeline tracking and contradiction handling
Critical Rules
- Minimal Capture Only
Record ONLY what the user explicitly states. Do NOT add elaborations, examples they didn't give, or details to fill gaps.
The problem is mixing, not suggesting:
❌ User: "Character A competes with B" → Capture: "A and B compete for leadership through a tournament with three rounds..." ✅ User: "Character A competes with B" → Capture: "A and B compete" + optional: "Tournament? Political? Trial?"
- Source Tagging (Simple 3-Tag System)
Default: Untagged = user said it. Most ideas come from the user, so treat them as the default.
ONLY use tags for special context:
<AI>...</AI>
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AI suggestions/possibilities (MUST be clearly wrapped)
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Use when offering ideas user didn't state
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Keep to 2-3 brief options
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Example: <AI>Competition could be: tournament-style, political maneuvering, or trial-based</AI>
<hidden>...</hidden>
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Author-only information meant to be revealed later
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Secret character motivations
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Planned twists/revelations
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Behind-the-scenes reasons unknown to characters/readers yet
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Example: <hidden>Z secretly wants them both to fail so he can reclaim leadership</hidden>
When to offer AI suggestions:
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User asks for ideas
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User seems stuck
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Offering brief possibilities to spark creativity
When to stay minimal:
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User is actively exploring their own ideas
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Just capturing an ongoing discussion
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User didn't ask for suggestions
- Preserve Vagueness
Keep it vague if user leaves it vague:
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"might create tension" → Record as uncertain
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"thinking about" → Record as consideration
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"maybe" → Record as possibility
- Multiple Options Coexist
Working notes can contain contradictions and multiple possibilities. Don't resolve them - just list the options being considered.
Output Approach
Use whatever structure fits the discussion. Could be:
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Bullet lists
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Sections organized by topic
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Timeline format
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Character-focused groupings
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Whatever captures the brainstorm clearly
Essential elements:
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Minimal capture (user's words, not elaborations)
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Vagueness preserved
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AI suggestions wrapped in <AI> tags
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Author-only info wrapped in <hidden> tags when relevant
Optional sections based on discussion:
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Open questions to explore
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Multiple options being considered
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AI suggestions (if offered)
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Contradictions to resolve later
Teaching Example: The Distinction
User Says:
"I'm thinking character X and character Y compete for leadership. Maybe this creates tension with character Z who was the previous leader."
✅ Good Capture:
Leadership Competition Notes
- X and Y compete for leadership
- Z was previous leader
- May create tension with Z (uncertain)
Open questions:
- Form of competition?
- How does Z respond?
- Outcome?
❌ Bad Capture:
Leadership Competition Arc
X and Y compete for leadership after Z steps down. Z feels threatened by the challenge to his authority.
The competition unfolds in three stages:
- Announcement and initial positioning
- First challenge where X demonstrates strength
- Second challenge where Y shows wisdom ... [20 more invented beats]
Why bad? Added massive elaboration the user never stated.
✅ Good with AI Suggestions:
Leadership Competition Notes
- X and Y compete for leadership
- Z was previous leader
- May create tension with Z (uncertain)
Open questions:
- Competition format: <AI>tournament-style? political maneuvering? trial-based?</AI>
- Z's response: <AI>oppose both? support one? stay neutral?</AI>
- Resolution?
✅ Good with Hidden Author Notes:
Leadership Competition Notes
- X and Y compete for leadership
- Z was previous leader
- May create tension with Z (uncertain)
- <hidden>Z is secretly manipulating both X and Y to destroy each other, planning to reclaim power after they're both discredited</hidden>
Open questions:
- Competition format?
- Outcome?
Why use <hidden> ? The manipulation twist is planned for later reveal. Readers/characters don't know yet, but the author needs to track it while brainstorming.
If You're Over-Elaborating
Stop if you're writing:
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Numbered scene lists
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Detailed backstories
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Specific dialogue
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Precise timelines
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Multiple paragraphs per point
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Examples user didn't mention
Wrap AI suggestions in <AI> tags, keep minimal (2-3 options).
Success Check
Good: User says "Yes, that's what I said" Bad: User says "I never said all that"
Notes should feel skeletal and incomplete. That's the point - preserves creative freedom.
After Capturing: Discuss and Explore
DON'T just write notes and stop. After capturing, engage with the user to help develop ideas:
Useful follow-ups:
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Clarifying questions: "You mentioned tension with Z - are you thinking internal conflict or external confrontation?"
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Potential directions: "This setup could go a few ways: political intrigue, personal drama, or action-focused. What feels right?"
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Exploring implications: "If Z opposes them both, how does that change the power dynamics?"
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Connecting threads: "This competition ties into the earlier succession crisis you mentioned - want to explore that link?"
Keep it conversational:
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Offer 2-3 possibilities, not exhaustive lists
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Ask about what excites the user
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Help clarify vague ideas without over-defining them
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Point out interesting implications or contradictions
The goal: Help the user think through their ideas, not take over the creative process.
Skills are Composable
Feel free to combine with other skills when helpful (e.g., using cw-official-docs to document finalized worldbuilding, or cw-story-critique to analyze what you're brainstorming).
File Placement (Claude Code)
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Check project docs for conventions
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Look at where similar content lives
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Place near related content
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Name: brainstorm-[topic].md
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Ask if unclear