Core features in SagaCraft
SagaCraft has a specific feature set built around its core audience and use cases.
The features below explain what SagaCraft actually does and how each one fits the product's intended purpose.
Core features
- Characters who stay consistent: Track names, roles, goals, fears, secrets, relationships, backstories, voice notes, and character arcs. Keep the person on the page connected to the person you planned.
- Plots with visible shape: Organize main plots, subplots, mysteries, reveals, twists, conflicts, promises, payoffs, and unresolved threads so the story has a clear working structure.
- Chapters that connect to the larger story: Plan, draft, and review chapters with awareness of what came before and what still needs to happen. Keep scenes tied to character movement, plot progress, and reader expectation.
- Settings that feel lived in: Build towns, kingdoms, starships, schools, cities, cultures, magic systems, technologies, histories, and recurring locations without losing the details that make them believable.
- Timelines that hold together: Track what happened, when it happened, who knew about it, and what changed afterward. Prevent accidental timeline drift before it becomes revision pain.
- Lore that supports the story: Organize rules, myths, histories, factions, social structures, prophecies, family lines, and world details so they serve the novel instead of overwhelming it.