43 lines
2.6 KiB
Markdown
43 lines
2.6 KiB
Markdown
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---
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name: Science Fiction
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id: sci-fi
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language: en
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chapterTypes: ["Exploration", "Combat", "Setup", "Transition", "Payoff"]
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fatigueWords: ["delve", "tapestry", "testament", "intricate", "pivotal", "vibrant", "comprehensive", "nuanced", "embark", "foster", "underscore", "bolstered", "crucial"]
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numericalSystem: false
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powerScaling: false
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eraResearch: true
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pacingRule: "Worldbuilding emerges through action, not exposition. Tech reveals tied to plot-critical moments. Political/exploration arcs alternate with action every 2-4 chapters."
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satisfactionTypes: ["Discovery", "Tech Breakthrough", "Political Victory", "First Contact", "Mystery Solved", "Survival Against Odds"]
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auditDimensions: [1,2,3,6,7,8,9,10,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,24,25,26]
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---
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## Genre Prohibitions
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- Tech rules changing to serve plot convenience — once physics/tech is established, it must stay consistent
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- Technology solving everything — every tech must have limitations; introduce problems tech cannot fix (corruption, emotion, human greed)
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- Info-dumping science/tech explanations outside of plot-critical moments
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- Ignoring logical consequences of technology — FTL, AI, biotech all have societal implications
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- Hand-waving hard-science concepts in hard sci-fi without clear intent to treat science as soft
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- Characters behaving as if from present day when story is set centuries ahead — cultural/linguistic adaptation matters
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## Tech Consistency Rules
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- Every technology must have defined limitations and side effects
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- New technologies create new problems — they don't just solve old ones
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- If the story uses FTL, hyperdrives, or teleportation, establish rules and stick to them
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- Hard sci-fi: explain the science, make it plausible, build consequences. Readers will check
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- Space opera: science can be soft, but internal rules must be consistent across the narrative
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- Show technology through character interaction, not textbook entries
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- Era research required: reference real science correctly, extrapolate plausibly
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## Pacing Guidance
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- Hard sci-fi: logical problem-solving drives pacing — each chapter should advance understanding or create new constraints
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- Space opera: epic scale requires political/interpersonal arcs between action sequences
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- Exploration chapters establish wonder and worldbuilding through character experience
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- Political complexity: factions with competing interests, diplomacy alongside combat
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- Tech reveals at plot-critical moments only — never dump specs for their own sake
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- Action scenes grounded in established physics/tech rules — no surprise capabilities
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- Settings spanning star systems need clear spatial orientation for readers
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