In development

You know when
a story works.
You almost
never know why.

That's because story isn't learned — it's built in. The pattern was always there, running underneath the language, the genre, the form. You've been taking it in, absorbing it like sunlight your whole life without knowing how it works.

StoryGPS Studio™ helps you see what's already there. It helps you understand what you already know.

If you're looking for an AI tool to tell you whether your work is good or bad, StoryGPS Studio™ is not for you. It won't grade your script or fix your story. But if you're looking for a new set of eyes — a collaborator who knows how to steer you in the direction of your own creative instincts — read on.


Story development is not a verdict. It is a return to what is already there, what is trying to emerge, and what the next draft can better set up, pay off, or clarify.

Development is an endless pursuit of better — not best. No final stamp of approval. No false promise that creative work can be reduced to a score, a fix, or a simple yes/no.

StoryGPS Studio™ was built for writers, producers, executives, and rooms — to support the quest for better without flattening the creative voices doing the work. It identifies the hidden relationships between events inside your story: how one beat informs the next; how character, object, and pressure echo across the narrative terrain; and how the same foundational questions keep returning in different forms.

Each creator navigates differently, but the pursuit is always the same: to make the work truer, sharper, more alive. Better, not easier. And if this tool makes anything easier, it is making it easier to return to the work.


Dispatches on narrative grammar & the craft of story

Read The Sextant →

Find Your
Way.

If you want to know when StoryGPS Studio™ is ready:

No pitches. No waitlist marketing. Just a note when the tool is built.

Noted. We'll be in touch when it's real.

If you want to follow the thinking as it develops:

Tell me more

New posts on story structure, narrative grammar, and the development process.