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Harbormaster's Rules 
You'll get out of it what you put into it. While there are no minimum word counts or other requirements, your blog is only as good as you make it. If a particular prompt asks a question that can be answered in a single sentence, there's no judgment if you choose to write only a single sentence. That said, blogging is a more fulfilling activity when you put some thought and effort into your responses, and you're more likely to get feedback if there's more content to respond to. Even if you can answer a prompt with a single sentence, you are encouraged to give each prompt some thought and to elaborate on your answer, even if the prompt itself doesn't specifically ask you to go into detail.
If you don't have anything nice to say, don't say anything at all. Blogs are often collections of very personal writings and we want to encourage rather than discourage people in their blogging. It's okay to disagree or even offer constructive criticism, but do so in a civilized manner and please remember that the key word is "constructive." Just like WdC's "Guidelines To Great Reviewing" , please only submit reviews or blog comments that are "honest, encouraging, respectful, and well-rounded."
Rate your blog appropriately. Any rating you choose for your blog is okay with us, just make sure that you use the appropriate rating so that readers can accurately assess the content of your blog. It's fine if you want to use mature language or talk about risque subjects, but we want blog readers to be able to find content that matches their tastes and preferences, and avoid content they might wish to avoid.
Please respond in kind. If someone takes the time to visit your blog and provide a comment, please consider returning the favor. One of the best ways to increase traffic to your own blog is to interact with the blogs of others.
Ask questions. Please feel free to post any questions in the forum below, or email Harbormaster Jeff  directly.
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The Forum 
Everyday blogging. The core function of Blog Harbor is to provide prompts for blogging inspiration. If you choose to respond to a prompt, just create a forum post with a subject line that reads: Prompt #___ (where the blank is replaced with specific prompt number you're responding to... i.e., Prompt #1, Prompt #22, Prompt #58, etc.). In the body of the message, create an {entry:#######} link to your blog post... and that's all there is to it! There are no participation requirements or quotas to fill. Participate as often or as rarely as you like!
Special events and rewards. From time to time, Blog Harbor will run special events to encourage participation. These will be announced in advance, and specific guidelines (and prizes!) will be provided. In addition, the Harbormaster will occasionally reward particularly excellent blog posts with spontaneous goodies (gift points, merit badges, etc.).
New prompts every month. The current plan is to post a new series of prompts every month, enough to maintain a daily blogging habit. An archive of old prompts will also be maintained so bloggers can take advantage of the entire archive at any time.
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Prompts 
Prompts ▼
Prompt #1: If you were an actor, do you think it'd be more interesting to be a "that guy" or "that girl" character actor (i.e., someone who audiences recognize from a bunch of different roles, but isn't famous enough to have many leading roles or to be a household name), or to be an actor that was really famous for one role years ago (e.g., Mark Hamill as Luke Skywalker, Daniel Radcliffe as Harry Potter, Jennifer Grey as Baby from Dirty Dancing, etc.)?
Prompt #2: The World Economic Forum has found the average adult will outlive their savings by approximately a decade. What are your best tips for wise spending and saving?
Prompt #3: Choose a job you have (or have held in the past) and discuss the skills required. Explain why each skill is needed and how they can be learned.
Prompt #4: Connect two seemingly unrelated themes. This is a creative approach where you can help people understand something using a mainstream or relatable reference. For example, you can connect a form of entertainment, such as a movie or television show, to a business process.
Prompt #5: What information do you have about a specific topic that your readers might not know?
Prompt #6: Did you try something that didn’t work out? Is there a mistake you made that had significant consequences? Share one of your most memorable lessons learned.
Prompt #7: Have you seen the Comedy Central celebrity roasts? It’s a show where celebrities poke fun at another featured celebrity, and it’s a tactic you can use on your blog. Choose your favorite celebrity, or one you know plenty about, and write your own jokes about them.
Prompt #8: Create a fictional event (e.g., the singularity, a zombie apocalypse, World War III, aliens are discovered, etc.), and explain how you’d handle it.
Prompt #9: Write your own urban myth to explain a mysterious phenomena, establish a legend, or just plain scare your reader.
Prompt #10: Describe your favorite place to write.
Prompt #11: Create an alternate outcome to a historical event. What would you change and how would you rather have it shake out?
Prompt #12: What's your favorite historical event or time period, and why do you find it so interesting?
Prompt #13: If you were to run for political office, what position would you run for? Walk us through your campaign strategy and policy positions.
Prompt #14: Rant about something that can't be changed and how you wish it could be.
Prompt #15: Challenge a popular opinion.
Prompt #16: Make a prediction for the future and explain your reasoning.
Prompt #17: If you had the opportunity to meet an infamous criminal, would you want to? Who would it be?
Prompt #18: If you could switch places with someone, would you choose someone based on the person you would want to become, or based on the person you'd want to experience your life? Who would that be?
Prompt #19: Who inspires you? Give a quick overview of the person and why you find them so compelling.
Prompt #20: Where is your favorite place in the whole world?
Prompt #21: What's your favorite possession?
Prompt #22: What plot twist (it can be from any movie, television show, book, video game, etc.) surprised you the most?
Prompt #23: Do you have any family stories from previous generations? Share one if you have it, and/or tell us a story about your life that you'd like your descendants to retell for years to come.
Prompt #24: Who's your favorite fictional character and why?
Prompt #25: Describe your dream vacation if you were to have unlimited funds and unlimited vacation days.
Prompt #26: What's the weirdest or most unusual item on your bucket list?
Prompt #27: If you had a single wish to change one thing about the world to make it a better place, what one thing would you change if you wanted to do the most good?
Prompt #28: If you could create a charitable foundation with billions of dollars in resources, what causes would you try to tackle?
Prompt #29: What are the top five things that distract you or affect your productivity?
Prompt #30: What's one bad habit you wish you could overcome?
Prompt #31: If you could have an evening with any four living people, who would they be and what would your ideal evening consist of?
Prompt #32: What book or franchise would you love see turned into a movie or television show?
Prompt #33: What song do you currently listen to on repeat?
Prompt #34: Do you listen to podcasts? What are some of your favorites?
Prompt #35: What books are on your bookshelf?
Prompt #36: What Writing.com activity or contest is currently your favorite? Which defunct activity or contest do you miss (if any)?
Prompt #37: Do you prefer Mac or PC (or Google, LINUX, etc.)? iOS or Android? Why?
Prompt #38: Have you ever written or called one of your government representatives? If so, who was it and what did you say? If not, what issue or concern would make you reach out to them?
Prompt #39: What's your favorite kind of gift to receive? What kind of gifts do you think are overrated?
Prompt #40: Congratulations, you're a bestselling author and they're letting you plan the book tour. What twenty cities are you going to visit and why?
Prompt #41: If you were on trial for a crime you didn't commit, would there be any circumstances under which you'd consider taking a plea deal? If so, what and why?
Prompt #42: When it comes to friends, do you prefer a few ride-or-dies, or many casual acquaintances?
Prompt #43: Have you ever wanted to be the boss at a place you've worked? What aspects of being a boss are appealing? Do you think you'd actually be good at it?
Prompt #44: What would you spend your money on if you won the lottery? After all the usuals (paying off your house, clearing your debts, buying your parents a new car, etc.), what would you spend the rest of your fortune on?
Prompt #45: Do you enjoy learning new things? What's the last major topic/subject you learned something about?
Prompt #46: If you could go back and change your major in college, what would it be? If you never went to college, would you go back if you could? If so, what would you want to study?
Prompt #47: Do you think you have a good imagination? Why or why not?
Prompt #48: Are you a good judge of character? Tell us why or why not.
Prompt #49: Provided you had the resources to adequately care for all of them, how many pets would you like to own and what kinds?
Prompt #50: What type of story (specific narrative, not just a general genre) do you never get tired of reading or hearing about?
Prompt #51: Have you ever changed a belief you felt strongly about? If so, when was the last time and what was that belief?
Prompt #52: What happened on your first date?
Prompt #53: What are you grateful for?
Prompt #54: Which of your five senses would you be most distraught to lose? If you had to pick one to lose, which would it be?
Prompt #55: What fictional universe would you most want to visit?
Prompt #56: Do you consider yourself to have a personal style? If so, what is it?
Prompt #57: You have the power to control the weather. What do your seasons look like and how long do they last?
Prompt #58: If a "gap year" focused on service (civil service, military service, nonprofit volunteer, etc.) were required after high school, how would you spend that year?
Prompt #59: Do you play a musical instrument? What instrument would you want to know how to play?
Prompt #60: What would you want to eat for your last meal?
Prompt #61: What's something most people don't know about you?
Prompt #62: Describe your perfect day.
Prompt #63: What's one of your biggest regrets?
Prompt #64: Write about a time where you accidentally stumbled into a wild success. What happened?
Prompt #65: What are your thoughts on crypto (cryptocurrency, blockchain, NFTs, etc.)?
Prompt #66: What are your thoughts on AI (large language models, generative AI vs. other AI, etc.)?
Prompt #67: If you couldn't live in the state, country, etc. that you currently live in, where would you want to live instead?
Prompt #68: If you had to become a minimalist with only ten personal possessions (other than the basics - i.e., home, furniture, clothes, personal hygiene items, etc.), what would those ten things be?
Prompt #69: Do you enjoy farming/gardening? If you had to maintain one, what kinds of things would you want to produce?
Prompt #70: Between your living space, your vehicle (if applicable), and your workspace... which is the cleanest? Which is the messiest?
Prompt #71: What do you think of "Smart Home" devices? (e.g., thermostats, appliances, etc. that you can connect to with your phone, voice operated entertainment, etc.)
Prompt #72: Do you enjoy working in public spaces (coffee shops, libraries, etc.)? Why or why not?
Prompt #73: Are you an "outdoorsy" person (enjoys camping, fishing, hiking, etc.)? What do you enjoy about the outdoors?
Prompt #74: Do you have any traditions in your family? What are they?
Prompt #75: Do you enjoy going out alone (e.g., to dinner at a restaurant, to see a movie, etc.)? Why or why not?
Prompt #76: If someone were to come visit you, what are the top three things you'd take them to do/see where you live?
Prompt #77: What's the first music album you ever owned?
Prompt #78: Do you enjoy playing board games? What are some of your favorites?
Prompt #79: What's the last book you read that you absolutely loved?
Prompt #80: When was the last time in your life you were truly awestruck by something?
Prompt #81: Which hired help would you most like to have: a personal trainer, a personal chef, a personal assistant, a driver, or a housekeeper/nanny?
Prompt #82: What elective class was your favorite in school?
Prompt #83: When it comes to new technology, are you an early adopter or someone who waits until later to try it out?
Prompt #84: What's the first movie you remember being really impacted by seeing?
Prompt #85: Do you enjoy live theater (stage plays, musicals, etc.)? Why or why not?
Prompt #86: Do you enjoy playing video games? What are some of your favorites?
Prompt #87: If you were going to start a career as a professional thief, what would you start off stealing?
Prompt #88: If you were a secret agent with multiple aliases, who would they be? Tell us their cover occupations and countries of origin (and names if you feel like it!).
Prompt #89: Imagine you're rich enough to afford multiple vehicles and their upkeep (let's say six). Which cars, trucks, boats, helicopters, private jets, etc. would be in your fleet?
Prompt #90: Give us a short term (before the end of this year) and long term (in the next ten years) prediction. What do you see on the horizon?
Prompt #91: Do you subscribe to any video/social media channels (YouTube, Instagram, TikTok, etc.)? What are some of your favorites?
Prompt #92: Do you review products/services on websites like Amazon, Yelp, etc.? Why or why not?
Prompt #93: Talk about a frivolous guilty pleasure that the internet has allowed you to enjoy more easily from home.
Prompt #94: Other than Writing.com, what websites do you frequent the most often?
Prompt #95: If you were to join a "trivia night" at a local bar/restaurant, what topic would be your specialty? What topic would you be completely lost on?
Prompt #96: What's a sport that you wish were more popular where you live? What sport do you think is overrated?
Prompt #97: What children's books did you love reading most when you were growing up?
Prompt #98: Do you exercise regularly (i.e., at least a couple times a week)? If so, what's your typical exercise routine?
Prompt #99: Other than your career, what's the longest you've spent formally training for something, and what is it that you trained for?
Prompt #100: How many siblings do you have (if any)? Given the choice, would you prefer to be an only child, or have several siblings?
Prompt #101: If you had to live out a year in a different historical period, with no way to bring modern conveniences, which era would you choose—and why?
Prompt #102: Create your own ridiculous but fully thought-out conspiracy theory.
Prompt #103: What movie or show did you hate the first time but grew to love—or vice versa?
Prompt #104: What’s your favorite holiday tradition, real or imagined?
Prompt #105: Design a theme park based on your favorite book, show, or movie. What are the rides and attractions?
Prompt #106: What's a superstition you actually follow, even if you don't believe in it?
Prompt #107: Write a dating profile for a fictional character of your choice.
Prompt #108: If your life were a video game, what kind of game would it be? What’s the main objective?
Prompt #109: Describe your dream writing retreat. Where is it? Who’s there?
Prompt #110: Invent a new holiday. What’s it called and how do people celebrate it?
Prompt #111: What piece of technology do you think we’ve become too dependent on?
Prompt #112: If you could witness any event in human history, what would you want to see firsthand?
Prompt #113: Describe an irrational fear you’ve had since childhood.
Prompt #114: What would your wardrobe look like in a sci-fi or fantasy universe?
Prompt #115: If you could magically learn any one skill overnight, what would you choose and what would you do with it?
Prompt #116: What's a local food or tradition from where you live that outsiders just don’t understand?
Prompt #117: You’re given five minutes on live TV to say anything to the world. What do you say?
Prompt #118: Write a scene where your favorite fictional character meets your favorite historical figure.
Prompt #119: What’s the most niche or unusual compliment you’ve ever received?
Prompt #120: If you had to give up your favorite food forever in exchange for a life-altering opportunity, would you?
Prompt #121: What’s a trend you secretly love, even if you don’t admit it to most people?
Prompt #122: Write the opening paragraph or sales blurb of your autobiography.
Prompt #123: If your hometown had a tagline like a movie trailer, what would it be?
Prompt #124: What subject or topic do you wish more people were interested in?
Prompt #125: If animals could talk, which would be the most annoying—and which would be the wisest?
Prompt #126: Describe a moment in your life that would make a great scene in a movie—and who would play you?
Prompt #127: What’s something you’ve always wanted to say, but never found the right moment?
Prompt #128: You can speak with one inanimate object for a day. What is it and what does it say?
Prompt #129: What song do you think best represents your personality—and why?
Prompt #130: Write about the moment you knew you were really good (or bad) at something.
Prompt #131: What would be your first three executive orders as President?
Prompt #132: If someone wrote fanfiction about your life, what genre would it be?
Prompt #133: Imagine you wake up with a new ability—just one. What is it and what changes in your life?
Prompt #134: Which fictional villain do you secretly sympathize with, and why?
Prompt #135: What's one piece of advice you'd give your past self, but you know you wouldn’t have listened?
Prompt #136: What’s a small act of kindness you still remember years later?
Prompt #137: Design a dream job that doesn’t exist (yet).
Prompt #138: What kind of ghost would you be?
Prompt #139: What’s your weirdest “I can't believe this is happening right now” moment?
Prompt #140: What’s something you learned embarrassingly late in life?
Prompt #141: If your inner monologue had a voice actor, who would it be?
Prompt #142: Describe the moment you realized someone thought of you differently than you thought of yourself.
Prompt #143: What reality TV show would you most want to be on? What reality competition show do you think you'd do best at?
Prompt #144: What’s your favorite lie to tell at parties or in small talk?
Prompt #145: If you could make one law that everyone on Earth had to follow, what would it be?
Prompt #146: Create a menu for a restaurant inspired by your life.
Prompt #147: What’s something you’ve never done but think you’d be amazing at?
Prompt #148: What conspiracy theory would be the most fun if it turned out to be true?
Prompt #149: You’re tasked with redesigning the modern school system. What’s the first thing you change?
Prompt #150: What’s something you failed at in spectacular fashion—and what did you learn?
Prompt #151: You can only watch one movie, read one book, and listen to one album for the next month. What are your picks?
Prompt #152: What’s an opinion you held ten years ago that you’ve completely reversed?
Prompt #153: Which of your personality traits would make you a terrible superhero?
Prompt #154: What's something you love that everyone seems to hate?
Prompt #155: Describe a time you got wildly lost—literally or metaphorically.
Prompt #156: What would your warning label say?
Prompt #157: If your dreams were broadcast nightly, what would critics say about the programming?
Prompt #158: What's the best advice you’ve ever ignored?
Prompt #159: If you had to live in a fictional city, which one would you want to live in?
Prompt #160: Write about the most unexpected flattering comment you've ever received.
Prompt #161: Describe a character from your own life as if they were a character in a novel.
Prompt #162: You can swap lives with anyone for 24 hours—but they don’t know it. Who do you pick?
Prompt #163: What’s something you love now that your younger self would be shocked to find out?
Prompt #164: You’re hosting a dinner party. You can invite any three fictional villains. Who are they, and what’s on the menu?
Prompt #165: If your mood could control the weather, what would your week’s forecast look like?
Prompt #166: Create a new game show and describe the rules, host, and how to win.
Prompt #167: What’s your favorite kind of day, weather-wise, and what does it inspire you to do?
Prompt #168: If you could delete one trend or cultural phenomenon from existence, what would it be?
Prompt #169: You’re given a 10-second rewind button. How do you use it?
Prompt #170: Write about a real-life moment that felt like fiction.
Prompt #171: What item in your home has the most interesting backstory?
Prompt #172: If your life had a background soundtrack, what would play during your best and worst moments?
Prompt #173: What would your childhood self think about your current self?
Prompt #174: What do you want to believe in, even if you're not sure it's true?
Prompt #175: You're in charge of creating a new emoji. What is it, and what does it express?
Prompt #176: Design your ideal bookstore or library. What's special about it?
Prompt #177: If you could change the planet from a geographical standpoint (i.e., where things are located, etc.), what would you change about it?
Prompt #178: Write about the first time you realized adults don’t always know what they’re doing.
Prompt #179: What movie or television series would you want to live out in real life?
Prompt #180: You’re offered the chance to remember everything you've ever forgotten. Do you accept?
Prompt #181: Describe your quirks as if you were a tour guide pointing them out to a tour group.
Prompt #182: If your name had to be an acronym, what would it stand for?
Prompt #183: What’s the most spontaneous decision you’ve ever made?
Prompt #184: Create your own inspirational quote—and explain what it means to you.
Prompt #185: What’s your go-to “comfort media” when you need a pick-me-up?
Prompt #186: If you inner monologue were a theme song, what would it be?
Prompt #187: Design your own escape room based on a hobby or interest of yours.
Prompt #188: What's one mystery (big or small) from your life that you still haven’t solved?
Prompt #189: What's the most impressive thing you've learned to do entirely on your own?
Prompt #190: If your pet (real or imagined) wrote a letter to you, what would it say?
Prompt #191: Describe your ideal morning routine in a world without time constraints.
Prompt #192: What’s your personal version of success—and has it changed over time?
Prompt #193: If your favorite pet were a person, what would they be like?
Prompt #194: Tell the story of a coincidence that felt like fate.
Prompt #195: What's something small that feels like a big win every time?
Prompt #196: You’re given one free class or workshop of any kind. What do you take and why?
Prompt #197: What do you not miss about “the good old days”?
Prompt #198: Where in your life do you have chaos? Do you thrive on that chaos?
Prompt #199: Imagine your ideal day... but from the perspective of someone else watching you.
Prompt #200: Finish this sentence: “I never expected to be the kind of person who…”
Fiction Prompts ▼
Prompt #F1: Western + Ghost Story. Write a frontier tale where the dead vastly outnumber the living. (Genre)
Prompt #F2: Courtroom Epic. A case is being tried, but the crime itself belongs to an entirely different genre. (Genre)
Prompt #F3: Fairy Tale as Noir. Spin any fairy tale into a classic Noir story. (e.g., I knew the dame in the red riding jacket was trouble when she walked in asking about her grandmother. (Genre)
Prompt #F4: Genre Hollowed Out. Horror: Write a horror story with every convention present except fear. (Genre)
Prompt #F5: Sci-Fi in a Magic World. Give equal weight to science and magic in one story. (e.g. a spaceship crash-lands in a kingdom where wizards debate alchemy over ale. (Genre)
Prompt #F6: Genre in Miniature. Capture an entire genre in 500 words or less (think “the world’s smallest epic” or “a haiku-length western”). (Genre)
Prompt #F7: Alt-Genre Biography. Write a well-known historical figure’s biography as though it belongs to a different genre (e.g., Napoleon in a romance, Cleopatra in cyberpunk). (Genre)
Prompt #F8: Myth as Satire. Create a myth (or rewrite an existing myth) and skewer it (e.g., the gods call a staff meeting to discuss quarterly mortal sacrifice numbers). (Genre)
Prompt #F9: Genre in the Wrong Place. Write a genre piece set somewhere wildly inappropriate for it (e.g., a high fantasy in an IKEA, a western in an urban retirement condo). (Genre)
Prompt #F10: Clashing Tropes. Take two genres you loathe and smash them together until the story is good. (Genre)
Prompt #F11: The Chain Reaction. Start with a tiny mistake and let it escalate until something irreversible happens. (Plot)
Prompt #F12: The Missing Villain. Everyone insists there’s a villain at work — but the villain never actually appears. (Plot)
Prompt #F13: The Peripheral Focus. The main event happens off-stage; the story focuses only on the sidelines. (Plot)
Prompt #F14: The Reverse Mystery. Begin with the solution, then work backward to uncover the mystery itself. (Plot)
Prompt #F15: The Endless Middle. Write a story where beginnings and endings collapse — only the middle matters. (Plot)
Prompt #F16: The Circular Plot. End where you began — but nothing is the same. (Plot)
Prompt #F17: The Story That Refuses. Every time you try to push the plot forward, it bends sideways into something else (e.g., you’re writing a heist, but the characters keep wandering back to childhood memories). (Plot)
Prompt #F18: The Plot That Eats Itself. A character discovers they’re in a story, and that awareness begins to unravel the plot (e.g., the narrator crosses out their own sentences until nothing is left). (Plot)
Prompt #F19: The Broken Timeline. Scenes are scrambled out of order, but the reader can still piece the story together. (Plot)
Prompt #F20: The Vanishing Motive. A character sets out with a clear goal, but the closer they get, the less they want it (e.g., a quest for revenge that dissolves into forgiveness, or indifference). (Plot)
Prompt #F21: The Placeholder. A character exists only because someone else is gone — they’re a stand-in, never meant to last (e.g., the substitute teacher who keeps showing up long after the real teacher should have returned). (Character)
Prompt #F22: The Symbiotic Pair. Two characters share one life in the worst way (e.g., when one eats, the other starves). (Character)
Prompt #F23: The Heir of Nothing. A character inherits a crown or title, but all power is gone. (Character)
Prompt #F24: The Mirror Character. They exist only to reflect someone else and vanish when left alone. (Character)
Prompt #F25: The Everyday Superstition. A harmless daily ritual may (or may not) be holding the world together (e.g., knocking on wood keeps the sun rising). (Character)
Prompt #F26: The Unreliable Narrator. A narrator whose version of events cannot be fully trusted is the hero of the story. (Character)
Prompt #F27: The Silent Witness. A character sees everything but cannot communicate it directly. (Character)
Prompt #F28: The Reluctant Legend. They’re famous for something they never actually did. (Character)
Prompt #F29: The Detective of Unnoticed Things. Someone notices details no one else cares about. (e.g., the color of a thread, the squeak of a hinge). (Character)
Prompt #F30: The Echo Villain. They repeat the words or actions of others, unable to create anything original until something breaks the pattern. (Character)
Prompt #F31: }The No-Dialogue Dialogue. Two characters only communicate through gestures, silences, or interruptions. (e.g., a whole argument played out in slammed doors and sighs). (Dialogue)
Prompt #F32: The Broken Translator. Dialogue is mistranslated, skewed, or distorted — but the meaning leaks through. (Dialogue)
Prompt #F33: The Ghost Conversation. Only one side of the dialogue appears; the rest must be inferred. (Dialogue)
Prompt #F34: The Unwanted Dialogue. A character tries to monologue, but someone else keeps interrupting. (Dialogue)
Prompt #F35: The Choral Interruption. Two speakers try to tell a story, but a group voice (“we”) constantly interferes. (Dialogue)
Prompt #F36: The Running Commentary. One person tells a story, while another derails it with sarcastic asides (e.g., “It was a dark and stormy night.” — “No, it wasn’t, it was Tuesday and barely drizzling.”) (Dialogue)
Prompt #F37: Unreliable Dialogue. Every line contradicts something already said. (Dialogue)
Prompt #F38: Dialogue with the Environment. A character speaks, and the setting “responds” through weather, objects, or sound. (e.g.: “Don’t leave me.” The wind slams the door shut). (Dialogue)
Prompt #F39: Inanimate Interlocutor. A conversation with a mirror, a machine, or a house. (Dialogue)
Prompt #F40: The Confessional. One speaker never hears the other — a priest, a therapist, a recorder. (Dialogue)
Prompt #F41: The Impossible. A place that cannot logically exist, but feels lived in (e.g., a town where every street loops back to the same cottage-style house). (Setting)
Prompt #F42: The Setting that Moves. The location itself (or some element of it) won’t stay still. (Setting)
Prompt #F43: The Everyday Apocalypse. The end of the world, but only inside one ordinary place. (Setting)
Prompt #F44: The Unreliable Setting. What we see may not be the truth (e.g., the house insists it has nine rooms, but you count ten or eleven, depending on the time of day). (Setting)
Prompt #F45: The Inherited Place. Someone inherits a location with rules they don’t understand. (Setting)
Prompt #F46: The Overly Ordinary Place. A setting so aggressively normal it becomes strange. (Setting)
Prompt #F47: The Collapsing Place. A place falls apart in real time — crumbling, glitching, unraveling. (Setting)
Prompt #F48: The Absurd Geography. A patchwork of places that shouldn’t be adjacent (e.g., a desert morphs into a waterfall, and the waterfall turns to snow before it hits the bottom). (Setting)
Prompt #F49: The Story Inside a Setting. The setting itself tells the story — walls, trees, weather. (Setting)
Prompt #F50: The Setting That Won’t Let Go. Once entered, leaving becomes nearly impossible. (Setting)
Prompt #F51: The POV of a Secret. A secret itself tells the story (e.g., “They never meant for me to get out, but I slipped from one mouth to another.”) (POV)
Prompt #F52: The Plural Voice. A group narrates as “we.” (POV)
Prompt #F53: The Absent POV. A narrator who was never present insists they were there. (POV)
Prompt #F54: The Second Person Trap. Told in “you,” but the “you” is not the reader. (POV)
Prompt #F55: The POV Swap. Midway through, narration switches characters without warning. (POV)
Prompt #F56: The POV Outside Language. A narrator can’t express themselves in words — only shapes, sounds, or metaphor. (POV)
Prompt #F57: The POV That Refuses. The narrator resists telling the story they’re supposed to (e.g., “I won’t talk about what happened in the basement. Ask someone else.”) (POV)
Prompt #F58: The POV of an Echoing Future. The narrator knows how it ends and leaks glimpses throughout. (POV)
Prompt #F59: The Off-Center POV. The narrator isn’t the main character and isn’t telling the MC’s story, yet the MC shapes everything anyway. (POV)
Prompt #F60: The Non-Visual POV. A narrator who cannot use sight, relying on other senses. (POV)
Prompt #F61: Light That Burns. Light arrives, but it is merciless (e.g., the sunrise scalds instead of warms). (Symbolism)
Prompt #F62: Darkness as Refuge, In the dark, they could finally see. (Symbolism)
Prompt #F63: Water That Erases. Every drop takes something with it (e.g., a rainstorm that washes away memories). (Symbolism)
Prompt #F64: Fire That Preserves. The fire would not burn (e.g., instead of destroying the letter, the flames sealed it intact). (Symbolism)
Prompt #F65: Seasons Out of Step. It was spring, but nothing grew. (Symbolism)
Prompt #F66: Flowers of Violence. Every grave burst into bloom. (Symbolism)
Prompt #F67: Birds That Cannot Escape:. The sky was open, and that was the problem. (Symbolism)
Prompt #F68: Roads That Loop. Every mile brought them back. (Symbolism)
Prompt #F69: Mirrors That Refuse. The mirror turned its face away. (Symbolism)
Prompt #F70: Blood Without Meaning. Their blood relation meant nothing at all. (Symbolism)
Prompt #F71: The Broken Promise. Everything depends on a promise that cannot be kept. (Theme / Concept)
Prompt #F72: The Unknowable. A story built around something that cannot be explained, only felt (e.g., a noise in the walls that everyone hears but no one can name). (Theme / Concept)
Prompt #F73: Entropy. Systems, relationships, or even sentences decay as the story progresses. (Theme / Concept)
Prompt #F74: Futility. Everything done is undone, yet characters persist (e.g., A farmer who replants the same field every day, only to find it bare by morning). (Theme / Concept)
Prompt #F75: Connection Across Distance. People find a way to connect when distance should make it impossible (e.g., two strangers who write messages on opposite sides of a shared wall). (Theme / Concept)
Prompt #F76: The Wonder of the Ordinary. Everyday things reveal unexpected awe. (Theme / Concept)
Prompt #F77: Resilience. After breaking, something (or someone) continues on in a new form. (Theme / Concept)
Prompt #F78: The Secret Joy. A hidden pleasure sustains someone silently (e.g., a janitor who whistles symphonies while working late at night). (Theme / Concept)
Prompt #F79: The Accidental Creation. Something beautiful is made entirely by accident. (Theme / Concept)
Prompt #F80: The Return of Hope. When all is lost, hope reappears quietly (e.g., a single candle lit in a citywide blackout). (Theme / Concept)
Prompt #F81: Epistolary. Tell the story through letters, journal entries, or unsent drafts. (Structure / Form)
Prompt #F82: The Frame Story. A story within a story — one wraps around another (e.g., a traveler tells a tale by the fire, which holds the “real” story inside it). (Structure / Form)
Prompt #F83: Unbroken Sentence. Write the entire story as a single sentence. (Structure / Form)
Prompt #F84: Found Texts. Build the story entirely from receipts, notes, transcripts, or warnings. (Structure / Form)
Prompt #F85: Erasure. Words vanish as the story progresses, eroding piece by piece. (Structure / Form)
Prompt #F86: The Braided Story. Two or three narratives told in alternating strands that echo one another. (Structure / Form)
Prompt #F87: The Refrain. A line or phrase keeps returning, reshaping its meaning each time (e.g., “She never came home” reads differently as the story unfolds). (Structure / Form)
Prompt #F88: The Rashomon. The same event retold from multiple perspectives but none are definitive. (Structure / Form)
Prompt #F89: The Nested Story. Stories within stories, with the innermost one altering the outer frame. (Structure / Form)
Prompt #F90: The Countdown. Sections descend numerically (10 → 1), tension building as the numbers shrink. (Structure / Form)
Prompt #F91: The Triple Mask. Write one story that cycles through three different genres without warning by shifting tone, style, and expectation each time, but still holding together. (Advanced Genre)
Prompt #F92: The Mismatched Timelines. Two speakers in different times (or realities) overlap as if speaking simultaneously (e.g., one voice from 1912, another from 2025, having the same “conversation.”) (Advanced Dialogue)
Prompt #F93: The Theme in Reverse. Write a story where the theme only becomes clear when read backwards. (Advanced Theme / Concept)
Prompt #F94: The Recursive Story. Tell a story within a story within a story where the layers leak into each other until you can’t tell which is “real.” (Advanced Plot)
Prompt #F95: The Kaleidoscope. Every paragraph shifts to a new point of view — human, animal, object, abstract, or collective — yet the story still holds together. (Advanced POV)
Prompt #F96: The Reversible Story. Write a story that can be read top-to-bottom and bottom-to-top, with each direction creating a different meaning. (Advanced Structure / Form)
Prompt #F97: The Mosaic. A story told through fragments (vignettes, snapshots, shards) that only add up once assembled. (Advanced Structure / Form)
Prompt #F98: The Marginalia. The “main text” is constantly interrupted or overtaken by commentary, corrections, or notes in the margins. By the end, the marginalia may matter more than the story itself (e.g., a character dies on page one, then begins editing the manuscript from the margins). (Advanced Structure / Form)
Prompt #F99: The Disintegrating Story. Write a story that unravels as it progresses — pieces vanish, collapse, or fall away. It might be words disappearing, dialogue shortening, scenes shrinking, or entire subplots breaking off. By the end, only fragments remain. (Advanced Structure / Form)
Prompt #F100: The Fragmented Place. Write a story where the setting exists only in pieces; not everything is visible at once. (Advanced Setting)
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