1. Paste enough context
Include the end of the previous scene plus the names, goals, relationships, and objects that matter. A few connected paragraphs work better than one isolated sentence.
Paste the story you already wrote, choose what should happen next, and generate a continuation that keeps the same characters, point of view, tense, and narrative voice.
For the strongest continuity, paste the final 500-2,000 words and mention any fact the next scene must not contradict. Press Ctrl+Enter to generate.
Example continuation
The signal stopped the moment Mara touched the greenhouse door. For one breath she heard only rain tapping the glass and the uneven rhythm of her own pulse.
Then the dead radio in her pocket whispered her name. The voice sounded like her brother, but he had been missing for eleven years.
The tool treats your existing pages as continuity context, then writes forward from the final sentence instead of replacing your draft.
An AI story continuer solves a different problem from a general story generator. You already have a scene, characters, a narrative voice, and unresolved questions. The useful next step is not another unrelated premise; it is a continuation that understands what has already happened. Paste the relevant ending of your draft, and the tool uses that context to produce the next beat or scene.
The generator pays attention to names, relationships, point of view, verb tense, setting details, current stakes, and the emotional state at the end of the excerpt. Your optional direction gives it a destination without forcing you to write the entire scene yourself. You can request a discovery, confrontation, quiet transition, cliffhanger, romantic turn, action sequence, or another specific development.
Genre, tone, and length controls help the output fit your project. Keep the existing genre when the draft already has a clear identity, or select a genre when your excerpt is short or ambiguous. The continuation-style menu can preserve the voice or deliberately increase tension, emotion, description, pace, or dialogue. The length control is useful for generating a single beat, a complete scene, or a longer passage for revision.
Generated prose should be treated as a draft. Read it beside your original text, keep the lines that move the story forward, and revise details that only you know. The tool is most useful for overcoming a stalled transition, testing several possible next scenes, or discovering a new direction while keeping the final creative decision in your hands.
Include the end of the previous scene plus the names, goals, relationships, and objects that matter. A few connected paragraphs work better than one isolated sentence.
Describe the next story move without scripting every line. A useful direction names the character's immediate goal, the obstacle, and anything that must remain hidden.
Use a short continuation for one beat, medium for a complete scene, and long when you want several developments before stopping at a natural transition.
Check names, timeline, world rules, character knowledge, and promises from earlier chapters. Keep the strongest prose and edit anything that conflicts with your private notes.
Only paste text you are comfortable sending for generation. Avoid confidential manuscripts, personal data, or material you do not have permission to use.
A precise direction produces a more useful next scene than a vague request to simply write more.
| Story ending | Direction | Settings | Likely result |
|---|---|---|---|
| A detective finds a second key inside the victim's locked desk. | Have her test the key at the abandoned train station, but keep the murderer's identity hidden. | Mystery, tense, medium | A clue-driven scene that advances the investigation and ends with a stronger question. |
| Two former friends are trapped overnight in a mountain cabin during a storm. | Let the power fail and force them to discuss the betrayal that ended their friendship. | Romance, emotional, long | A dialogue-led reconciliation scene with unresolved romantic tension. |
| A young mage discovers that every spell erases one of her memories. | She must cast again to save her sister, but show the cost before the rescue succeeds. | Fantasy, descriptive, medium | A consequence-focused continuation that respects the magic rule and raises the personal stakes. |
Continuity improves when the input makes the current scene, desired change, and forbidden contradictions easy to identify.
Paste through the final complete sentence. If the excerpt ends too early, the generator may continue the wrong conflict or repeat a development that already happened.
Tell the tool what the viewpoint character wants in the next scene. A concrete objective creates action and reduces generic exposition.
Say which mystery, identity, relationship, or world rule must not be revealed yet. This prevents a continuation from resolving the central question too soon.
If the excerpt switches between characters or uses an unusual narrator, add a short direction such as 'stay in Lena's first-person point of view.'
Try the same excerpt with two or three different directions. Comparing alternatives often reveals the strongest conflict, pacing choice, or emotional turn.
The first generated line connects two writing systems: yours and the model's. Revising that bridge often makes the whole continuation feel more natural.
An AI story continuer is a writing tool that reads an unfinished passage and generates the next part. Unlike a blank-page story generator, it uses the existing characters, events, tense, point of view, tone, and unresolved plot details as context.
It can imitate visible patterns such as sentence length, point of view, tense, level of description, and dialogue balance. A longer, consistent excerpt gives it more evidence. You should still revise the output because personal voice includes choices that may not be obvious from one passage.
Paste at least a few connected paragraphs. For stronger continuity, use the final 500-2,000 words of the current scene or chapter, especially when earlier details affect what happens next. The input limit is 12,000 characters.
Yes, if you have the right to use the text you provide. Include the relevant character relationships, current canon assumptions, and the exact point where the scene stops. Avoid pasting copyrighted text that you do not have permission to reproduce or transform.
The tool can only use information included in the current request. Add a short continuity note in the direction field when an earlier promise, injury, secret, location, or world rule must shape the next scene.
Regenerate with a more specific direction and state the contradiction to avoid. For example: 'Jon does not know Mira is his sister yet' or 'magic cannot heal injuries in this world.' Then revise the result against your outline and character notes.
The tasks overlap, but an expander usually adds detail inside existing text while a continuer writes what happens after the last sentence. Use this page when your main need is a new beat or scene that moves the plot forward.