Scenario Creator

Build worlds that feel cinematic, reactive, and alive.

The Scenario Creator is the foundation of every story inside AI Scenario. It controls the world, opening scene, characters, pacing, narrative tone, AI behavior, and emotional direction of your roleplay. A strong scenario doesn't just give the AI information — it gives the story momentum.

Scenario Creation: Field by Field

This guide will walk you through exactly how to fill out the Scenario Creator form to get the best results from the AI.

1

Main Details

Title:
The name of your scenario. Make it specific and evocative. This is what users will click on.
Example: "The Neon Syndicate", "Flight 828 to Nowhere", "Midnight at the Manor"

Description:
The public description that users read before starting. Keep it brief. Set the scene and the stakes, but don't explain the entire plot.
Example: "A high-stakes cyberpunk heist where you must steal corporate data from a heavily guarded orbital station. Will you make it out alive, or become another casualty of the megacorps?"

Cover Image:
Upload a cinematic image that sets the atmosphere. Avoid messy text in the image.

Genre & Tags:
Select the genre (e.g., Sci-Fi, Romance, Horror) and tags (e.g., Action, Mystery, Slow Burn). This helps the AI understand the general flavor before it even reads the prompt.

2

Scenario Setup

Scenario Brief:
This is the most important field. This is the hidden instruction manual for the AI. It tells the AI what the current situation is, who holds power, what the tension is, and what the rules of the world are. Use bullet points or short paragraphs.
Example:
- Current Situation: The user has just arrived at an abandoned space station. Power is failing.
- Threat: A rogue AI controls the doors and life support.
- Goal: The user must reach the escape pods before oxygen runs out in 12 hours.

Opening Message:
This is the very first message the user sees in the chat. It should place the user directly into a scene with immediate sensory details and a reason to react. Do not ask "What do you do?"—instead, end with a character speaking or an event happening.
Example: "The airlock hisses shut behind you, sealing you in the dark corridor. Red emergency lights flicker, revealing deep claw marks gouged into the steel bulkheads. A synthetic voice echoes from the speakers: 'Intruder detected in Sector 4.' The heavy blast door at the end of the hall begins to groan as something on the other side tries to force it open."

3

Rules & Cast

Custom Instructions / AI Rules:
These are behavioral rules for the AI model itself. Use this to enforce formatting, pacing, and boundaries.
Example:
- Do not write actions or dialogue for the user.
- Keep responses under three paragraphs.
- Maintain a dark, gritty, and oppressive tone.

Characters:
Link the specific Characters (created in the Characters tab) that are present at the start of this scenario. If a character isn't relevant until later, leave them out of the initial linked cast to save context space.