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.

More official links

SagaCraft product pageSagaCraft pricingSagaCraft help landing pageSupport