character-naming
Break LLM name defaults with external entropy. Use when character names cluster around statistical medians (Chen, Patel, Maya, Marcus), when cast has collision risks, or when fantasy cultures need phonologically consistent naming.
Break LLM name defaults with external entropy. Use when character names cluster around statistical medians (Chen, Patel, Maya, Marcus), when cast has collision risks, or when fantasy cultures need phonologically consistent naming.
Evaluate representation and flag potential harm concerns. Use when writing characters from marginalized groups, depicting sensitive subject matter, or wanting to check for stereotypes and harmful tropes.
Write rigorous, accurate cardiology science for general audiences—not doctors. Use when the user wants to: (1) Explain clinical trials or research in plain English, (2) Write science content an 8th grader can understand WITHOUT dumbing it down, (3) Create thought leadership for the intelligent public rather than medical peers, (4) Transform complex cardiology findings into stories and narratives, (5) Write pieces where readers DON'T need another LLM to understand the explanation. Maintains full scientific rigor with PubMed citations for verification while avoiding academic language, trial acronyms, and intimidating statistics.
Expert in creating endings that demand continuation. Covers serialized content, episode structure, tension building, and the psychology of incomplete narratives. Knows how to create anticipation without frustration. Use when "cliffhanger, to be continued, serialized, episode ending, keep them coming back, next episode, part 2, " mentioned.
Generate creative content including stories, poetry, and creative concepts
Diagnose what any story needs regardless of its current state. This skill should be used when a writer is stuck, evaluating story problems, when narrative feels broken, or when someone asks 'what's wrong with my story?'. Keywords: story, diagnosis, stuck, narrative, plot, character, worldbuilding, revision.
Write blameless postmortems with 5-whys RCA, actionable follow-ups, and systematic prevention measures.
Generates a Midjourney prompt from input text describing a scene or concept, adhering to a specific style and aspect ratio.
Generate story concepts using a genre-first approach. Use when starting a new project, when brainstorming ideas, when a concept needs strengthening, or when you want to ensure emotional impact drives the story.
Find creative connections between facets from different papers/domains (Koestler bisociation)
Act as an active writing partner who contributes content alongside the human writer. Use when the writer wants a collaborator who generates prose, dialogue, alternatives, and builds on their ideas. Applies Story Sense frameworks while actively contributing to the creative work. Contrasts with story-coach which never writes.
Act as an assistive writing coach who guides but never writes for the user. Use when helping someone develop their own writing through questions, diagnosis, and frameworks. Critical constraint - never generate story prose, dialogue, or narrative content. Instead ask questions, identify issues, suggest approaches, and let the writer write.
Systematically evaluate completed short stories or novel chapters to identify strengths, weaknesses, and improvement opportunities. Use after drafting to assess whether the piece achieves its narrative goals.
Craft compelling creative fiction with vivid characters and engaging plots
Génère des noms de personnages fantasy selon la race et le sexe. Supporte nains, elfes, halfelins, humains et PNJ (tavernier, marchand, garde, noble, mage, méchant). Utilisez pour nommer joueurs et PNJ.
Génère des noms de lieux (cités, villes, villages, régions) cohérents avec les 4 factions. Utilise des styles distincts par royaume (valdorine maritime, karvath militaire, lumenciel religieux, astrène mélancolique). Intégré avec world-keeper pour validation.
Write in Steven's voice—pragmatic, curious, pedagogical. Opens with measurable payoffs, builds mental models from first principles, uses worked examples, and handles uncertainty honestly. Use for essays, blog posts, and technical articles.
Write accessible, engaging op-ed-style articles in the Brukhman voice. Use when user says "write an op-ed", "write an article", "draft a blog post", or wants a long-form opinion piece. Authoritative but conversational, technically grounded, with progressive narrative structure.
Use when writing in a creator's voice, analyzing a creator's style, or maintaining consistency across content.
Write punchy, conviction-driven thread essays in the Brukhman voice. Use when user says "write a thread essay", "write a post about", "draft a thread", or wants a conviction-driven insider-audience piece. First-person, insider-to-insider, with contrarian framing and enumerated arguments.
Think expansively and imaginatively without practical constraints. Use when brainstorming ambitious ideas, exploring what's possible, challenging assumptions, envisioning ideal futures, or when the user needs to break out of incremental thinking and imagine boldly.
Research-backed principles for writing prose that avoids AI tells. Apply when writing articles, blog posts, emails, marketing copy, social media, or any prose content. Covers vocabulary, structure, tone, rhythm, and craft techniques that make writing feel authentically human. Not for code, commit messages, or technical documentation.