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The Ultimate Story & Screenplay Developer

Customize your Story & Screenplay prompt below.

Step 1 of 16 Start Over

Step 1: Format & Medium

Select your preferences for Format & Medium below.

Step 2: Genre & Sub-Genre

Select your preferences for Genre & Sub-Genre below.

Step 3: Narrative Structure

Select your preferences for Narrative Structure below.

Step 4: Protagonist Archetype

Select your preferences for Protagonist Archetype below.

Step 5: Antagonist & Conflict

Select your preferences for Antagonist & Conflict below.

Step 6: Tone & Atmosphere

Select your preferences for Tone & Atmosphere below.

Step 7: Setting & World Building

Select your preferences for Setting & World Building below.

Step 8: Theme & Message

Select your preferences for Theme & Message below.

Step 9: Pacing & Tension

Select your preferences for Pacing & Tension below.

Step 10: Dialogue Style

Select your preferences for Dialogue Style below.

Step 11: Character Flaws

Select your preferences for Character Flaws below.

Step 12: Visual Style / Imagery

Select your preferences for Visual Style / Imagery below.

Step 13: Key Tropes & Devices

Select your preferences for Key Tropes & Devices below.

Step 14: Resolution Type

Select your preferences for Resolution Type below.

Step 15: Context & Specifics

Enter any specific details, plot ideas, or character names here.

Step 16: Your Custom Prompt

Copy your prompt below.

From Blank Page to Pro Prompt in Minutes.
MiraclePrompts.com is designed as a dual-engine platform: part Creation Engine and part Strategic Consultant. Follow this workflow to engineer the perfect response from any AI model.
1 Phase 1: The Engineering Bay
Stop guessing. Start selecting. This section builds the skeleton of your prompt.
  • 1. Navigate the 14 Panels The interface is divided into 14 distinct logical panels. Do not feel pressured to fill every single one—only select what matters for your specific task.

    Use the 17 Selectors: Click through the dropdowns or buttons to define parameters such as Role, Tone, Audience, Format, and Goal.
Power Feature
Consult the Term Guide

Unsure if you need a "Socratic" or "Didactic" tone? Look at the Term Guide located below/beside each panel. It provides instant definitions to help you make the pro-level choice.

2 Phase 2: The Knowledge Injection
Context is King. This is where you give the AI its brain.
  • 3. Input Your Data (Panel 15) Locate the Text Area in the 15th panel.

    Dump Your Data: Paste as much information as you wish here. This can be rough notes, raw data, pasted articles, or specific constraints.

    No Formatting Needed: You don’t need to organize this text perfectly; the specific parameters you selected in Phase 1 will tell the AI how to structure this raw data.
3 Phase 3: The Consultant Review
Before you generate, ensure you are deploying the right strategy.
  • 2. The Pro Tip Area (Spot Check) Before moving on, glance at the Pro Tip section. This dynamic area offers quick, high-impact advice on how to elevate the specific selections you’ve just made.
Strategic Asset
4. Miracle Prompt Pro: The Insider’s Playbook

Master the Mechanics: This isn't just a help file; it contains 10 Elite Tactics used by expert engineers. Consult this playbook to unlock advanced methods like "Chain of Thought" reasoning and "Constraint Stacking."

  • 5. NotebookLM Power User Strategy Specialized Workflow: If you are using Google’s NotebookLM, consult these 5 Tips to leverage audio overviews and citation features.
  • 6. Platform Deployment Guide Choose Your Weapon: Don't just paste blindly. Check this guide to see which AI fits your current goal:
    • Select ChatGPT/Claude for creative reasoning.
    • Select Perplexity for real-time web search.
    • Select Copilot/Gemini for workspace integration.
4 Phase 4: Generation & Refinement
The final polish.
  • 7. Generate Click the Generate Button. The system will fuse your Phase 1 parameters with your Phase 2 context.
  • 8. Review (Panel 16) Your engineered prompt will appear in the 16th Panel.
    Edit: Read through the output. You can manually tweak or add last-minute instructions directly in this text box.
    Update: If you change your mind, you can adjust a panel above and hit Generate again.
  • 9. Copy & Deploy Click the Copy Button. Your prompt is now in your clipboard, ready to be pasted into your chosen AI platform for a professional-grade result.
Quick Summary & FAQs
Need a refresher? Check the bottom section for a rapid-fire recap of this process and answers to common troubleshooting questions.

Story & Screenplay Development: The Ultimate 16-Step Miracle Prompts Pro

Story & Screenplay Development requires more than just a spark of inspiration; it demands a forensic approach to narrative architecture. This tool transforms fragmented ideas into industry-standard scripts and manuscripts by systematically engineering every plot beat, character arc, and thematic undercurrent. Whether you are crafting a high-octane TV pilot or a contemplative literary novel, this master guide provides the strategic precision needed to dominate your genre and captivate audiences from the opening hook to the final fade-out.

Step Panel Term Reference Guide
Step 1: Format & Medium
Why it matters: The medium dictates the narrative engine, pacing, and visual language, acting as the container that shapes the story's scope.
  • Feature Film Script: Traditional 90-120 page structure focusing on a single, resolved narrative arc.
  • TV Pilot (1 Hour): Drama-centric format establishing long-term conflicts and ensemble dynamics.
  • TV Pilot (30 Min): Tight, rhythm-based storytelling often used for comedies or dramedies.
  • Limited Series Bible: A comprehensive document mapping a finite, high-stakes narrative over 6-10 episodes.
  • Short Film Script: A singular, potent narrative punch emphasizing efficiency and visual storytelling.
  • Stage Play: Dialogue-driven format relying on confined spaces and immediate character friction.
  • Novel (Full Length): Deep psychological exploration allowing for extensive internal monologue and world-building.
  • Novella: A focused narrative bridge between the brevity of a short story and the depth of a novel.
  • Short Story Anthology: Thematic collection of distinct narratives connected by a central thread.
  • Graphic Novel Script: Visual-first storytelling relying on panel descriptions and economy of dialogue.
  • Audio Drama / Podcast: Soundscape-dependent storytelling utilizing foley and voice acting for immersion.
  • Interactive / Game Narrative: Branching storyline structures dependent on player agency and mechanics.
  • Web Series: Rapid-fire, hook-heavy content designed for digital consumption patterns.
  • Documentary Treatment: Fact-based narrative structuring for non-fiction subjects and interviews.
  • Commercial / Promo: Hyper-compressed storytelling designed to evoke emotion or action in seconds.
  • Animation Script: limitless visual potential requiring specific formatting for storyboard artists.
  • Transmedia Bible: expansive lore documentation for stories spanning multiple platforms.
  • Other: Use for experimental formats or hybrid mediums not listed above.
Step 2: Genre & Sub-Genre
Why it matters: Genre establishes the contract with the audience, defining the obligatory scenes and emotional payoff they expect.
  • Psychological Thriller: Tension driven by the instability of the protagonist's mind.
  • Hard Sci-Fi: Speculative fiction grounded in scientific accuracy and technical plausibility.
  • High Fantasy: Epic scale narratives set in completely invented worlds with magic systems.
  • Neo-Noir / Crime: Morally gray narratives featuring cynicism, shadows, and fatalism.
  • Romantic Comedy: Character chemistry driven by humorous obstacles and emotional fulfillment.
  • Historical Drama: Narratives constrained by the social and political realities of a specific past era.
  • Elevated Horror: Fear-based storytelling layered with complex thematic or social commentary.
  • Dystopian / Cyberpunk: Societal critique set in oppressive futures dominated by technology or ruin.
  • Coming of Age: The psychological and moral growth of a protagonist from youth to adulthood.
  • Action / Adventure: Physical external conflict featuring set-pieces, chases, and high stakes.
  • Satire / Dark Comedy: Humorous critique of society using irony, exaggeration, and ridicule.
  • Magical Realism: Realistic settings invaded by subtle magical elements accepted as normal.
  • Biographical / True Story: Dramatization of real lives requiring adherence to historical record.
  • Mystery / Whodunit: Puzzle-based plotting focused on the revelation of a hidden truth.
  • Western / Neo-Western: Themes of justice and wilderness, often set on the frontier or its modern equivalent.
  • Family / Animation: Four-quadrant storytelling appealing to both children and adults.
  • Musical: Narrative where emotional peaks are expressed through song and dance.
  • Other: Define niche cross-genres or specific sub-genres here.
Step 3: Narrative Structure
Why it matters: Structure provides the skeleton of the story, ensuring pacing, character change, and thematic resonance occur at the right moments.
  • Three-Act Structure: The classic setup, confrontation, and resolution framework.
  • Hero's Journey (Monomyth): Cyclical quest structure emphasizing the protagonist's transformation.
  • Save the Cat!: Beat-sheet methodology focusing on pacing milestones and audience empathy.
  • Dan Harmon’s Story Circle: A simplified 8-step cycle of order into chaos and return.
  • Five-Act Structure: Shakespearean arc adding distinct rising action and falling action phases.
  • Non-Linear / Fragmented: Events presented out of chronological order to create puzzle-like engagement.
  • Real Time (24 Hours): Narrative duration matches screen duration for intense immediacy.
  • Kishōtenketsu: Traditional East Asian structure focusing on development and twist rather than conflict.
  • Frame Narrative: A story within a story, often used to contextualize or question the inner tale.
  • Multi-Protagonist: Parallel storylines weaving together multiple main characters.
  • Episodic / Procedural: Self-contained stories that reset the status quo at the end.
  • Serialized Arc: Continuous storytelling where plot points carry over across chapters/episodes.
  • Reverse Chronology: Telling the story backwards from effect to cause.
  • Rashomon Effect: The same event retold from contradictory perspectives.
  • Dual Timeline: Two distinct time periods interacting thematically or causally.
  • Interactive Branching: Structure designed for user choice and multiple outcomes.
  • Stream of Consciousness: Narrative mimicking the unedited flow of human thought.
  • Other: Use for experimental or avant-garde structural forms.
Step 4: Protagonist Archetype
Why it matters: Archetypes provide a universally recognized foundation upon which you build a unique and specific character.
  • The Reluctant Hero: A capable individual who refuses the call until forced by circumstance.
  • The Anti-Hero: A protagonist lacking traditional heroic qualities like idealism or morality.
  • The Chosen One: A character destined for greatness, often burdened by prophecy.
  • The Mentor / Sage: A wise figure who guides others but may have a tragic past.
  • The Everyman: An ordinary person thrust into extraordinary circumstances (audience surrogate).
  • The Trickster: A character who disrupts the status quo through wit and deceit.
  • The Tragic Hero: A noble character destined for downfall due to a fatal flaw.
  • The Outlaw / Rebel: A figure existing outside societal norms, challenging authority.
  • The Lover: Motivated primarily by romantic connection or passion.
  • The Caregiver: Driven by the desire to protect and nurture others.
  • The Explorer: Driven by the need for freedom, discovery, and the unknown.
  • The Creator: Driven by the need to craft something enduring or innovative.
  • The Ruler: Motivated by control, order, and leadership.
  • The Innocent: Optimistic figure seeking happiness and fearing punishment.
  • The Magician: Seeking to understand the fundamental laws of the universe.
  • The Warrior: Driven by competition, mastery, and overcoming odds.
  • The Orphan: Seeking belonging and connection after abandonment.
  • Other: Specific character types or hybrid archetypes.
Step 5: Antagonist & Conflict
Why it matters: A story is only as strong as the force opposing the hero. The antagonist defines the stakes and forces growth.
  • Mastermind Villain: Intellectual rival who orchestrates events from the shadows.
  • Nature / Environment: Apathetic, overwhelming forces of the natural world.
  • Society / The System: Institutional oppression, bureaucracy, or cultural norms.
  • Inner Self (Man vs. Self): Psychological conflict, trauma, or addiction.
  • Supernatural Force: Entities or powers beyond natural law (ghosts, demons).
  • Rival / Competitor: A peer with the same goal but opposing methods.
  • Betrayer / False Friend: An antagonist concealed within the protagonist's inner circle.
  • Technology / AI: Cold logic or malfunctioning machines threatening humanity.
  • Abstract Concept: Conflict against time, death, or inevitability.
  • Corrupt Authority: Figures of power abusing their position (police, politicians).
  • Monster / Beast: Primal, physical threat devoid of reason.
  • The Mirror: A villain who represents what the hero could become.
  • Family Member: Intimate conflict complicated by blood ties and history.
  • Disease / Pandemic: Biological threat that is invisible and pervasive.
  • Fate / Destiny: The struggle against a predetermined outcome.
  • Ideology / Fanaticism: Conflict against a belief system rather than a person.
  • Unknown / Mystery: The threat is the lack of information itself.
  • Other: Unique or specific antagonistic forces.
Step 6: Tone & Atmosphere
Why it matters: Tone is the emotional coloring of the story; it dictates how the audience "feels" the plot points.
  • Gritty & Realistic: Unvarnished, grounded portrayal of life and consequences.
  • Whimsical & Magical: Lighthearted, wonder-filled, often suspending physics.
  • Dark & Ominous: Foreboding sense of impending doom or evil.
  • Satirical & Witty: Sharp, intellectual humor often mocking the subject.
  • Melancholic & Somber: Sad, reflective, and deeply emotional.
  • High-Octane & Intense: Adrenaline-fueled, breathless pacing.
  • Romantic & Dreamy: Idealized, soft-focus emotional landscape.
  • Suspenseful & Tense: Anxiety-inducing, tight, and nerve-wracking.
  • Absurdist & Surreal: Bizarre, dreamlike logic that defies convention.
  • Optimistic & Inspiring: Uplifting focus on human potential and hope.
  • Nostalgic & Warm: Comforting, looking back with fondness.
  • Clinical & Cold: Detached, observational, and unemotional.
  • Chaotic & Manic: High energy, unpredictable, and potentially confusing.
  • Eerie & Unsettling: subtle wrongness that disturbs rather than scares.
  • Epic & Grandiose: Larger-than-life scale and operatic emotions.
  • Intimate & Character-Driven: Small scale, focused closely on internal states.
  • Deadpan & Dry: Humor or drama delivered without emotional inflection.
  • Other: Specific atmospheric blends.
Step 7: Setting & World Building
Why it matters: The setting is not just a backdrop; it is a character that provides obstacles, resources, and thematic reflection.
  • Urban Metropolis: Dense, vertical, anonymous, and often alienating environments.
  • Small Town / Rural: Close-knit communities where everyone knows secrets; high exposure.
  • Deep Space / Spaceship: Isolation, technological dependence, and the infinite void.
  • Post-Apocalyptic: Scarcity, ruin, and the remnants of a fallen civilization.
  • High Fantasy Realm: Constructed worlds with unique geography, politics, and magic.
  • Historical Era: Specific time periods requiring accuracy in dialect and props.
  • Confined Location: "Bottle episode" settings increasing pressure (elevator, bunker).
  • Wilderness / Survival: Man against the elements; primal and stripped back.
  • Cyberpunk City: High tech, low life; neon, rain, and corporate dominance.
  • Haunted House: A domestic space turned hostile and supernatural.
  • Institutional: Rigid rules and hierarchy (prisons, boarding schools, asylums).
  • Suburban Sprawl: Conformity, lawns, and the secrets hidden behind fences.
  • War Zone: Chaos, violence, and the breakdown of civil order.
  • Sea / Underwater: Pressure, darkness, and isolation in a fluid medium.
  • Alternate History: Familiar worlds changed by a single "what if" divergence.
  • Dreamscape / Mind: Surreal internal logic representing psychological states.
  • Road Trip: A constantly moving setting reflecting the internal journey.
  • Other: Unique or abstract locations.
Step 8: Theme & Message
Why it matters: The theme is the "argument" the story is making about the human condition. It unifies plot and character.
  • Redemption: The possibility of atoning for past sins.
  • Coming of Age: The painful transition from innocence to experience.
  • Love Conquers All: The ultimate power of connection over adversity.
  • Corruption of Power: How authority inevitably degrades morality.
  • Identity: The struggle to define who one truly is.
  • Man vs. Nature: The indifference of the universe to human struggle.
  • Loss of Innocence: The realization that the world is not safe or fair.
  • Revenge: The destructive cycle of seeking eye-for-an-eye justice.
  • Sacrifice: Giving up something precious for a larger cause.
  • Free Will: The question of whether we control our destiny.
  • Family vs. Duty: The conflict between personal love and professional obligation.
  • Tech vs. Humanity: The erosion of soul in the face of mechanization.
  • Isolation: The psychological impact of being truly alone.
  • Truth vs. Lies: The difficulty and necessity of facing reality.
  • Class Struggle: The friction between the haves and have-nots.
  • Mortality: The acceptance of death and the legacy we leave.
  • Faith vs. Reason: The clash between belief and empirical evidence.
  • Other: Specific philosophical or social arguments.
Step 9: Pacing & Tension
Why it matters: Pacing controls the release of information and adrenaline. It keeps the audience engaged without exhausting them.
  • Slow Burn: Gradual accumulation of tension leading to a late payoff.
  • Fast-Paced: Rapid sequence of events leaving little room to breathe.
  • Rollercoaster: Careful alternation between high action and low rest periods.
  • Steady Build: Linear increase in intensity from start to finish.
  • Explosive Start: Opening with the climax or high action (In Medias Res).
  • Non-Stop Action: Relentless forward momentum (e.g., Mad Max: Fury Road).
  • Contemplative: Prioritizing character thought over plot mechanics.
  • Hitchcockian: Showing the bomb under the table to create dread.
  • Ticking Clock: A literal or figurative deadline forcing action.
  • Atmospheric Dread: Pacing driven by mood and unease rather than events.
  • Rhythmic: Pacing that mimics music or a specific tempo.
  • Disorienting: Jarring shifts in speed to confuse and unsettle.
  • Slice of Life: Naturalistic pacing mimicking the flow of daily existence.
  • Crescendo: Everything building to a singular, massive finale.
  • Staccato: Short, punchy scenes conveying urgency or fragmentation.
  • Meditative: Extremely slow, focusing on texture and philosophy.
  • Chaotic Spiral: Accelerating pace reflecting a loss of control.
  • Other: Custom pacing strategies.
Step 10: Dialogue Style
Why it matters: Dialogue is action. The specific verbal style defines character voice and the reality of the world.
  • Sorkin-esque: High-intelligence, rhythmic, rapid-fire "walk and talk."
  • Tarantino-esque: Pop-culture laden, digressive, and uniquely stylized.
  • Minimalist: Characters say little; meaning is carried in subtext and silence.
  • Naturalistic: Umms, ahhs, and overlapping speech mimicking real life.
  • Shakespearean: Elevated, poetic, and rhythmically structured language.
  • Hard-Boiled: Cynical, clipped, and street-smart vernacular.
  • Screwball: Witty banter and verbal sparring matches.
  • Exposition Heavy: Dialogue used primarily to explain complex plot points.
  • Internal Monologue: Voiceover revealing private thoughts vs. public speech.
  • Whedon-esque: Self-aware, quippy, and ironic humor.
  • Formal / Period: Adherence to the strict linguistic rules of a past era.
  • Dialect Heavy: Phonetic writing capturing specific regional accents.
  • Technobabble: Specialized jargon used to convey expertise (Sci-Fi/Medical).
  • Surreal / Cryptic: Dialogue that is nonsensical or riddled with riddles.
  • Overlapping: Characters talking over each other (Altman-esque).
  • Instructional: Dry, procedural language lacking emotion.
  • Melodramatic: Heightened, emotional declarations.
  • Other: Unique linguistic patterns.
Step 11: Character Flaws
Why it matters: Flaws make characters relatable and provide the internal obstacles necessary for a character arc.
  • Hubris: Excessive pride or self-confidence leading to downfall.
  • Greed: Prioritizing material wealth over human connection.
  • Cowardice: The inability to act due to fear.
  • Addiction: Dependency on substances or behaviors to cope.
  • Naivety: Dangerous lack of experience or judgment.
  • Wrath: Uncontrollable anger that destroys relationships.
  • Jealousy: Resentment of others' success or possessions.
  • Obsession: Fixation on a goal to the detriment of everything else.
  • Apathy: Lack of care or feeling; moral numbness.
  • Self-Doubt: Crippling insecurity preventing action.
  • Loyalty: Blind allegiance to unworthy people or causes.
  • Paranoia: Irrational suspicion of others' motives.
  • Perfectionism: Inability to accept flaws or mistakes.
  • Stubbornness: Refusal to change or adapt despite evidence.
  • Deceitfulness: Compulsive lying or manipulation.
  • Gluttony: Excessive consumption (food, resources, pleasure).
  • Lust: Uncontrolled sexual desire driving poor decisions.
  • Other: Specific psychological hurdles.
Step 12: Visual Style / Imagery
Why it matters: Film and literature are visual media. The imagery establishes the mood and reinforces the theme subconsciously.
  • Film Noir: High contrast shadows (chiaroscuro), blinds, rain, and smoke.
  • Wes Anderson: Center-frame symmetry, pastel palettes, and flat composition.
  • Cyberpunk: Neon lights, holograms, rain-slicked streets, and grime.
  • Gothic: Decaying architecture, candlelight, fog, and ornate details.
  • Pastel / Dreamy: Soft focus, light colors, and ethereal lighting.
  • Gritty Realism: Handheld camera, natural light, and imperfect composition.
  • Steampunk: Brass, gears, steam, and Victorian-industrial aesthetics.
  • Minimalist: Clean lines, white space, and lack of clutter.
  • Psychedelic: Vibrant, shifting colors and distorted perspectives.
  • Desaturated: Muted colors reflecting hopelessness or poverty.
  • Golden Age: Rich, saturated Technicolor aesthetics.
  • Industrial: Concrete, steel, rust, and brutalist architecture.
  • Nature-Reclaimed: Ruins overgrown by vines and trees.
  • Surrealist: Imagery that mimics the illogical nature of dreams (Dali-esque).
  • Anime Style: Exaggerated expressions, speed lines, and dynamic angles.
  • Vintage / Sepia: Aged look implying history or memory.
  • High Contrast B&W: Stark black and white for dramatic impact.
  • Other: Custom visual languages.
Step 13: Key Tropes & Devices
Why it matters: Tropes are narrative shorthand. Used well, they satisfy; used poorly, they are clichés. Devices are tools to move the plot.
  • MacGuffin: An object everyone wants that drives the plot (e.g., the suitcase).
  • Chekhov's Gun: If a gun is shown in Act 1, it must go off by Act 3.
  • Red Herring: A false clue designed to mislead the audience.
  • Deus Ex Machina: A sudden, unearned solution (usually to be avoided).
  • Unreliable Narrator: A storyteller whose version of events cannot be trusted.
  • Love Triangle: Romantic conflict involving three parties.
  • The Prophecy: A prediction that drives characters to fulfill or avoid it.
  • Enemies to Lovers: Antagonistic relationship evolving into romance.
  • Ticking Clock: A time limit adding urgency to the goal.
  • Found Family: Characters bonding to form a non-biological family unit.
  • Fish Out of Water: Character placed in a completely unfamiliar environment.
  • Wham Shot: A massive plot twist that changes everything.
  • Breaking 4th Wall: Character acknowledging the audience directly.
  • Montage: Condensing time to show progress or travel.
  • Flashbacks: Jumping back in time to reveal context.
  • Cliffhanger: Ending a segment on a moment of high suspense.
  • In Medias Res: Starting the story in the middle of the action.
  • Other: Specific genre conventions.
Step 14: Resolution Type
Why it matters: The ending determines the lasting impression of the story. It answers the "dramatic question" posed at the start.
  • Happily Ever After: Total victory and emotional fulfillment.
  • Tragic: The hero fails, dies, or loses everything (Catharsis through pity).
  • Bittersweet: Victory is achieved, but at a significant cost.
  • Ambiguous: The outcome is left open to interpretation (Inception top).
  • Twist Ending: A sudden revelation recontextualizes the entire story.
  • Circular: The story ends exactly where it began.
  • Sequel Bait: Unresolved threads left specifically for a follow-up.
  • Pyrrhic Victory: A win so costly it feels like a defeat.
  • Deus Ex Machina: Sudden, divine intervention saves the day.
  • It Was All a Dream: Revealing the events were not real.
  • Moral Victory: Physical loss, but spiritual or ethical success.
  • Sacrificial: The hero dies to save others.
  • Philosophical: Ending on a question or realization rather than action.
  • Fade to Black: Abrupt ending leaving immediate aftermath unseen.
  • Epilogue: A look at the future far beyond the main climax.
  • Justice Served: The villain is punished; order is restored.
  • Injustice Prevails: The villain wins (Noir/Horror).
  • Other: Custom resolution.

Execution & Deployment

  • Step 15: Context Injection: Paste your logline, character names, specific locations, or rough notes here. The more specific the context, the less generic the AI output.
  • Step 16: Desired Output Format: The prompt automatically requests a "Master Plan," "Pre-Mortem," and "Resource Stack." Use the "Copy" button to transfer this optimized prompt to your AI of choice.
💡 PRO TIP: For complex narratives, run the prompt twice. First, select "Executive Summary" to get the high-level beat sheet. Then, feed that summary back into the "Context" field and ask for a "Scene-by-Scene breakdown" to get granular dialogue and action beats.

✨ Miracle Prompts Pro: The Insider’s Playbook

  • Subtext Injection: Ask AI to write dialogue where characters "say the opposite of what they mean."
  • The "Save the Cat" Test: Force the AI to identify the exact moment the audience bonds with the hero.
  • Villain Audit: Ask the AI to rewrite a scene from the Antagonist's perspective to ensure their motivation is valid.
  • Beat Sheet check: Request a Blake Snyder Beat Sheet analysis of your generated outline.
  • Sensory Pass: Command the AI to add "one smell, one sound, and one texture" to every scene description.
  • Dialogue Polish: Ask the AI to remove "on-the-nose" dialogue and replace it with action.
  • Pacing Heatmap: Request a visual graph of tension levels throughout the script to spot sagging middles.
  • Character Bible: Generate a 10-page deep-dive history for your protagonist before writing page one.
  • Theme Check: Ask the AI: "Does every scene in this outline serve the argument of [Theme]?"
  • Logline Iteration: Ask for 20 variations of your logline to find the perfect marketing hook.

📓 NotebookLM Power User Strategy

  1. The Series Bible Wiki: Upload all your character notes, setting descriptions, and previous chapters to NotebookLM to create a searchable "Source of Truth" for your story universe.
  2. Consistency Checker: Ask NotebookLM, "Does the protagonist's eye color or backstory change between Chapter 1 and Chapter 10?" to catch continuity errors.
  3. The Mock Interview: Upload your character sheets and "interview" your characters using the chat function to find their unique voice.
  4. Research Synthesis: Dump 50 PDF research papers about your setting (e.g., Victorian London) into a notebook and ask for "5 historical details that would add realism to a street scene."
  5. Audio Drama Simulation: Use the "Audio Overview" feature to listen to a podcast discussion of your plot outline, helping you hear plot holes you might have missed reading.

🚀 Platform Deployment Guide

  • Claude 3.5 Sonnet: The undisputed king of creative writing. Use Claude for nuance, subtext, and capturing specific character voices. It hallucinates less and understands "show, don't tell" better than others.
  • ChatGPT-4o: Best for structural ideation and bulk generation. Use it to brainstorm 50 plot twists or generate a full season arc in minutes. Excellent for formatting standard screenplays.
  • Gemini 1.5 Pro: The "Novel" engine. With its massive context window (2M tokens), you can upload entire previous books or series bibles, making it the only choice for maintaining continuity in long-form sagas.
  • Microsoft CoPilot: Strong for commercial viability. Use it to research current market trends, compare your logline against successful comps, and analyze audience demographics.
  • Perplexity: The fact-checker. Use it to instantly verify forensic details, historical timelines, or scientific plausibility within your story world.

⚡ Quick Summary

The Story & Screenplay Development Miracle Prompt is a forensic, 16-step narrative architecture tool designed to transform abstract concepts into industry-standard plots. It systematically aligns genre, structure, character flaws, and visual tone to generate comprehensive beat sheets, series bibles, and scene breakdowns using advanced AI models.

📊 Key Takeaways

  • Structure is Key: The tool offers 18 distinct narrative structures, including the "Hero's Journey," "Save the Cat!," and "Kishōtenketsu."
  • Character Depth: By pairing "Protagonist Archetypes" (Step 4) with specific "Character Flaws" (Step 11), the prompt forces deep psychological conflict.
  • Visual Grammar: Step 12 defines the "Visual Style" (e.g., Film Noir, Cyberpunk), ensuring the AI describes the look of the scene, not just the action.
  • Platform Strategy: Use Claude 3.5 Sonnet for dialogue and subtext, and Gemini 1.5 Pro for maintaining long-form continuity (Series Bibles).
  • Context is King: Step 15 requires specific injections (character names, locations) to prevent the AI from generating generic "hallucinations."

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Which AI model is best for screenwriting?
A: Claude 3.5 Sonnet is currently the superior choice for creative writing, nuance, and "show, don't tell" subtext. Use ChatGPT-4o for structural outlining and formatting.

Q: Can this tool help with "Writer's Block"?
A: Yes. By forcing you to make micro-decisions (Tone, Trope, Flaw) in the matrix, it eliminates the "blank page" paralysis and provides a concrete roadmap.

Q: What is the "Save the Cat" test mentioned in the guide?
A: This is a prompt strategy where you ask the AI to identify the exact moment in your outline where the audience emotionally bonds with the hero, ensuring empathy is established early.

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