Core features — ContentCraft
ContentCraft keeps lore organization, canon tracking, and AI-assisted drafting in one workspace so projects can grow without losing coherence.
The canon library is the foundation. Characters, factions, locations, items, arcs, and timeline entries all live in the same organized space and can reference each other. That relationship layer is what separates ContentCraft from a generic notes folder.
AI-assisted drafting is built into the workspace, but the canon is what makes it useful. When the AI has access to the project's established lore, new material can be generated with the world's rules already in scope. The writer controls what the AI sees, and reviews the output before treating it as settled.
The review workflow matters as much as the drafting. ContentCraft is designed for projects where you want to check new material against the existing canon before it becomes part of the project. That review step is how continuity drift gets caught before it spreads.
Core features
- Projects and shared library: Keep campaigns, settings, chapters, and supporting canon in one workspace instead of splitting them across unrelated tools.
- Canon and continuity tracking: Track characters, locations, items, factions, arcs, timelines, and references so story details stay consistent over time.
- Draft in deliberate steps: Move from outline to draft to review at your own pace instead of turning the whole project over to one blind prompt.
- Relationship mapping: Keep people, places, groups, and plot threads connected so the world reads like a system instead of a pile of notes.
- Catch contradictions early: Review new material against the existing canon before it becomes settled so inconsistencies get caught while they are still easy to fix.
- Export without losing history: Preserve history and diffs alongside export-ready outputs so context does not disappear every time material leaves the workspace.