Requirements
- Target platform
- OpenClaw
- Install method
- Manual import
- Extraction
- Extract archive
- Prerequisites
- OpenClaw
- Primary doc
- SKILL.md
Creative writing and storytelling powered by CellCog. Create stories, novels, screenplays, fan fiction, world building, character development, narrative design. AI-powered creative writing assistant.
Creative writing and storytelling powered by CellCog. Create stories, novels, screenplays, fan fiction, world building, character development, narrative design. AI-powered creative writing assistant.
Hand the extracted package to your coding agent with a concrete install brief instead of figuring it out manually.
I downloaded a skill package from Yavira. Read SKILL.md from the extracted folder and install it by following the included instructions. Tell me what you changed and call out any manual steps you could not complete.
I downloaded an updated skill package from Yavira. Read SKILL.md from the extracted folder, compare it with my current installation, and upgrade it while preserving any custom configuration unless the package docs explicitly say otherwise. Summarize what changed and any follow-up checks I should run.
Create compelling stories with AI - from short fiction to novels to screenplays to immersive worlds.
This skill requires the cellcog skill for SDK setup and API calls. clawhub install cellcog Read the cellcog skill first for SDK setup. This skill shows you what's possible. Quick pattern (v1.0+): # Fire-and-forget - returns immediately result = client.create_chat( prompt="[your story request]", notify_session_key="agent:main:main", task_label="story-creation", chat_mode="agent" # Agent mode for most stories ) # Daemon notifies you when complete - do NOT poll
Complete short stories: Flash Fiction: "Write a 500-word horror story that ends with a twist" Short Stories: "Create a 3,000-word sci-fi story about first contact" Micro Fiction: "Write a complete story in exactly 100 words" Anthology Pieces: "Create a short story for a cyberpunk anthology" Example prompt: "Write a 2,000-word short story: Genre: Magical realism Setting: A small Japanese village with a mysterious tea shop Theme: Grief and healing The protagonist discovers that the tea shop owner can brew memories into tea. Tone: Melancholic but hopeful. Studio Ghibli meets Haruki Murakami."
Long-form fiction support: Novel Outlines: "Create a detailed outline for a fantasy trilogy" Chapter Drafts: "Write Chapter 1 of my mystery novel" Character Arcs: "Develop the protagonist's arc across a 3-act structure" Plot Development: "Help me work through a plot hole in my thriller" Example prompt: "Create a detailed outline for a YA fantasy novel: Concept: A magic school where students' powers are tied to their fears Protagonist: 16-year-old who's afraid of being forgotten Antagonist: Former student whose fear consumed them Include: Three-act structure Major plot points Character arcs for 4 main characters Magic system explanation Potential sequel hooks"
Scripts for film and TV: Feature Scripts: "Write the first 10 pages of a heist movie" TV Pilots: "Create a pilot script for a workplace comedy" Short Films: "Write a 10-minute short film script about loneliness" Scene Writing: "Write the confrontation scene between hero and villain" Example prompt: "Write a cold open for a TV drama pilot: Show concept: Medical thriller set in a hospital hiding dark secrets Tone: Tense, mysterious, hook the audience immediately The scene should: Introduce the hospital setting Hint at something wrong without revealing it End on a moment that makes viewers need to know more Format: Standard screenplay format"
Stories in existing universes: Continuations: "Write a story set after the events of [series]" Alternate Universes: "Create an AU where [character] made a different choice" Crossovers: "Write a crossover between [universe A] and [universe B]" Missing Scenes: "Write the scene that happened between [event A] and [event B]"
Create immersive settings: Fantasy Worlds: "Design a complete magic system for my novel" Sci-Fi Settings: "Create the political structure of a galactic empire" Historical Fiction: "Research and outline 1920s Paris for my novel" Mythology: "Create a pantheon of gods for my fantasy world" Example prompt: "Build a complete world for a steampunk fantasy: Core concept: Victorian era where magic is industrialized I need: Geography (3 major nations) Magic system and its limitations Social structure and conflicts Key historical events Major factions and their goals Technology level and aesthetics 5 interesting locations with descriptions"
Deep character work: Character Bibles: "Create a complete character bible for my protagonist" Backstories: "Write the backstory of my villain" Dialogue Voice: "Help me develop a unique voice for this character" Relationships: "Map out the relationships between my ensemble cast"
GenreCharacteristicsCellCog StrengthsFantasyMagic, world building, epic scopeDeep world creation, consistent magic systemsSci-FiTechnology, speculation, ideasHard science integration, future extrapolationMystery/ThrillerSuspense, clues, twistsPlot structure, misdirection, pacingRomanceEmotional depth, relationshipsCharacter chemistry, emotional beatsHorrorFear, atmosphere, dreadTension building, psychological depthLiteraryTheme, style, meaningNuanced prose, thematic depth
ScenarioRecommended ModeShort stories, scenes, character work, outlines"agent"Complex narratives, novel development, deep world building"agent team" Use "agent" for most creative writing. Short stories, individual scenes, and character development execute well in agent mode. Use "agent team" for narrative complexity - novel-length outlines, intricate plot development, or multi-layered world building that benefits from deep thinking.
Complete short story: "Write a complete 2,500-word science fiction short story: Title: 'The Last Upload' Concept: In a world where consciousness can be uploaded, one person chooses to be the last to die naturally Structure: Non-linear, moving between their final day and key memories Tone: Philosophical, bittersweet End with an ambiguous moment that makes readers question their own choice." Character development: "Create a complete character bible for a morally complex antagonist: Setting: Modern political thriller Role: Senator who believes they're saving the country through corrupt means Include: Detailed backstory (childhood, formative events) Psychology (fears, desires, defense mechanisms) Relationships (family, allies, enemies) Speech patterns and mannerisms Their 'truth' they tell themselves What would make them change" World building: "Design the magic system for a fantasy novel: Constraints: Magic has a real cost (not just tiredness) Some people are born with it, some earn it It should enable interesting conflicts I need: How magic works mechanically Its limitations and costs How society treats magic users How it's learned/controlled 5 example uses (combat, utility, creative) Potential for abuse and safeguards"
Genre expectations: Readers have expectations. Honor them or subvert them intentionally, but know what they are. Character drives plot: Give CellCog clear character motivations. Plot emerges from characters wanting things. Specific details: "A coffee shop" is generic. "A coffee shop with mismatched furniture and a cat named Hemingway" is memorable. Emotional truth: Even in fantasy, the emotions should feel real. Specify the emotional journey you want. Show, don't tell: Ask for scenes, not summaries. "Write the moment she realizes..." not "Describe that she was sad." Iterate: First drafts are starting points. Use CellCog to revise, expand, and refine.
Writing, remixing, publishing, visual generation, and marketing content production.
Largest current source with strong distribution and engagement signals.