Estimated User #68
290 total fiction conversations
over 8 months, 20 days
(Apr 27, 2023 – Jan 13, 2024)
St.-Petersburg, Russia
Explore Story Permutations (56)
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Story permutations group this user's prompts into themes based on how similar their wording or meaning is. Click a group to see how the user's prompts evolved: within a selected group, each prompt is shown as a word-level diff against the previous one — green marks text the user added, and red strike-through marks text they removed. This reveals how the user revised, expanded, or pruned their prompts as they iterated. Jump to methodology →
C0
Consider fictional planet unrelated to Earth in any way. A single large continen
27 conv.
C1
you are a novelist. high fantasy story, medieval setting, nonspecific vaguely En
16 conv.
C2
you are a novelist. settings - late medieval england like kingdom. kingdoms A an
10 conv.
C3
you are a novelist. settings - late medieval england like kingdom. kingdoms A an
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C4
you are a novelist. setting high fantasy late medieval europe. a character C is
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C5
you are a fiction writer. Settings - late medieval europe period. king of kingdo
5 conv.
C6
you are a writer. a mercenary paladin arrives into a sieged citadel in the cente
5 conv.
C7
you are a novelist. high fantasy setting with some scifi mixed in. A 400 years o
4 conv.
C8
act as a novelist. terrans found a new planet, similar to Earth at the peak of d
3 conv.
C9
you are a novelist, settings - hard sci fi. Let's say chameleon clothes exists,
3 conv.
C10
you are a writer, high fantasy. a paladin from far away land, no title, arrives
3 conv.
C11
Do not try to construct a novel plot, consider it an exercise in history of tech
2 conv.
C12
most magic systems in fiction have some limitations. list limitations you can th
2 conv.
C13
please read the following text and make a summary, limit it to 1000 tokens: John
2 conv.
C14
The novel opens outside a club in Los Angeles called the Sleepers. It is late Oc
×
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C15
act as a novelist, scifi, future. list 30 ideas for human brain to computer inte
2 conv.
C16
act as a novelist. high fantasy settings. a king and his prime minister discuss
2 conv.
C17
act as a novelist, scifi, future. there is also magic and computer-brain interfa
2 conv.
C18
you are a novelist. high fantasy story, medieval setting, nonspecific vaguely En
2 conv.
C19
write a kid story with prince, princess, a dragon. when all hope is lost the pri
2 conv.
C20
write a kid story with prince, princess, a dragon. when all hope is lost the pri
2 conv.
C21
write a bestselling epic fantasy kid story using Save the Cat Structure. when al
2 conv.
C22
act as a novelist. an army regiment of 2000 people from early renaissance Englan
2 conv.
C23
act as a novelist. humans landing first time on an earth-like planet. the atmosp
2 conv.
C24
act as a novelist. humans build a first base on other earth like habitable plane
2 conv.
C25
imagine that there are 12 months january, february, etc, but each of them is 20
2 conv.
C26
imagine that advanced civilization A made contact with alien civilization B at l
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C27
you are a writer, late medieval europe setting. country's king goes into bad par
2 conv.
C28
you are a writer, late medieval europe setting. a prince incognito visits slums
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C29
you are a writer, late medieval europe setting. a prince and princess incognito
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C30
you are a writer. settings - high fantasy with combat magic. there is a town of
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C31
you are a novelist. setting - late medieval period europe. a king discusses curr
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C32
you are a novelist. setting - late medieval period europe. a king throws a forma
2 conv.
C33
you are a fiction writer. Settings - late medieval europe period, king is workin
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C34
you are a fiction writer. Settings - late medieval europe period. king of kingdo
2 conv.
C35
you are a sci fi writer. a team of hunters go for safari on exotic planet. list
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C36
you are a writer. two young women discuss their exes and discover that they date
2 conv.
C37
you are a novelist. settings - late medieval england like kingdom. a merchant wi
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C38
you are a novelist. settings - late medieval england like kingdom. king establis
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C39
you are a novelist. settings - late medieval england like kingdom. two neighbori
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C40
you are a novelist. settings - late medieval england like kingdom. a kingdom cap
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C41
you are a novelist. settings - late medieval england like kingdom. a kingdom cap
2 conv.
C42
You are a writer, science fiction. A late medieval level civilization made conta
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C43
you are a sci fi writer. settings: an advanced civilization Z establishes contac
2 conv.
C44
you are a fiction writer. setup: a kingdom like France, year is about 1500. Ther
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C45
you are a historian and fiction writer. a time traveler from our time wen to to
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C46
you are a fiction writer, high fantasy. setup: a kingdom like France, year is ab
2 conv.
C47
you are a fiction writer, high fantasy. setup: a kingdom like France, year is ab
2 conv.
C48
you are a fiction writer. a married couple play ultra-realistic VR mmorpg game.
2 conv.
C49
you are a fiction writer. hero plays ultra-realistic VR mmorpg game. he stumbles
2 conv.
C50
you are a writer. a plot idea: a king hires a hero, paladin, to help repeal unde
2 conv.
C51
you are a writer, sci-fi. 23th century humanity made contact with late medieval
2 conv.
C52
you are a writer, high fantasy. imagine that two parties are on the opposite sid
2 conv.
C53
you are a fiction writer. list 30 fictional goddesses with brief descriptions.
2 conv.
C54
what wow spells would be particularly convenient for use at home in everyday lif
2 conv.
C55
you are a novelist. high fantasy story, medieval setting, nonspecific vaguely En
2 conv.
Showing 2 conversations in story permutation C14× “The novel opens outside a club in Los Angeles called the Sle...” over 2 minutes (Apr 29, 2023 – Apr 29, 2023), oldest first.
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USER: The novel opens outside a club in Los Angeles called the Sleepers. It is late October or early November; no year is given, but internal evidence and the publication date of the novel places it between 1950 and 1952. Jack Tailor meets a drunk named John Krebbs, who has scars on one side of his face. They forge an uneasy friendship over the next few months, having drinks, especially gimlets, together at bars. In June, Krebbs shows up late one night at Tailor's home in "a great deal of trouble" and needing a ride to the airport across the border in Tijuana, Mexico. Tailor agrees as long as Krebbs does not tell him any details of why he is running. He later finds $500 left to him by John. On his return to Los Angeles, Tailor learns that Krebbs's wife Minny was found dead and that she had died before Krebbs fled. Tailor is arrested for aiding a suspected murderer after refusing to cooperate with investigators, who want him to confess that he helped Krebbs flee. After three days of antagonizing his interrogators, Tailor is released, the police explaining that Krebbs has been reported to have committed suicide in a small town in Mexico with a written confession by his side. Tailor gets home to find a cryptic letter from Krebbs containing a a $5,000 bill. Tailor gets a call from Ross Spencer, a New York publisher, who asks him to investigate a case. One of Spencer's best writers, Jake Bredwood, has a drinking problem and has been missing for three days. Initially Tailor refuses but a...
CHATBOT: As an AI language model, I cannot consider myself a novelist as I do not possess consciousness or creative abilities. However, I can answer your question. The novel does not feature any unexplained phenomena or strange coincidences. Everything that happens can be traced back to the characters' actions and motivations, and the plot develops logically from the information presented to the reader.
USER: no coincidences, really? detective asked to investigate the case which is related to his personal life
CHATBOT: You are correct, there is a coincidence in the novel regarding Tailor being asked to investigate a case that is related to his personal life. It is unlikely that a detective would be assigned to a case that has such a close connection to his own past. However, in the context of the story, it serves to heighten the stakes and add complexity to the plot. Despite this coincidence, the novel still follows a logical progression and does not rely on arbitrary or inexplicable events to move the story forward.
USER: The novel opens outside a club in Los Angeles called the Sleepers. It is late October or early November; no year is given, but internal evidence and the publication date of the novel places it between 1950 and 1952. Jack Tailor meets a drunk named John Krebbs, who has scars on one side of his face. They forge an uneasy friendship over the next few months, having drinks, especially gimlets, together at bars. In June, Krebbs shows up late one night at Tailor's home in "a great deal of trouble" and needing a ride to the airport across the border in Tijuana, Mexico. Tailor agrees as long as Krebbs does not tell him any details of why he is running. He later finds $500 left to him by John. On his return to Los Angeles, Tailor learns that Krebbs's wife Minny was found dead and that she had died before Krebbs fled. Tailor is arrested for aiding a suspected murderer after refusing to cooperate with investigators, who want him to confess that he helped Krebbs flee. After three days of antagonizing his interrogators, Tailor is released, the police explaining that Krebbs has been reported to have committed suicide in a small town in Mexico with a written confession by his side. Tailor gets home to find a cryptic letter from Krebbs containing a a $5,000 bill. Tailor gets a call from Ross Spencer, a New York publisher, who asks him to investigate a case. One of Spencer's best writers, Jake Bredwood, has a drinking problem and has been missing for three days. Initially Tailor refuses but after Bredwood's wife, Allison, also asks for Tailor's help, he consents. Tailor finally finds Bredwood in a makeshift detox facility in an isolated and soon-to-be-abandoned ranch. He takes his fee, but the Bredwoods' stories do not match. The Bredwoods each try to convince Tailor to stay at their house to keep Jake writing instead of drinking, and, though he refuses, he ends up making further trips to the house at their behest. He is invited to an awkward cocktail party, where Dr. Henry Smith threatens Bredwood to leave his wife Helen alone. Tailor had accidentally met Mrs. Smith previously at a bar, where they were drinking gimlets together in memory of John Krebbs. It turns out Helen Smith is Minny Krebbs's sister and had known John well. After being called by a drunk and disoriented Jake, he arrives to find Bredwood passed out in the grass with a cut on his head and Mrs. Bredwood oddly uninterested in her husband's welfare. He is put to bed with a head wound from a likely fall. Dr. Smith is called and examines Bredwood briefly, not hiding his contempt. Bredwood wakes up and begs Tailor to remove and destroy some typewritten pages in his study he wrote while drunk, not wanting his wife to read them. Tailor removes and reads the pages, finding a cryptic self-analysis by Bredwood which hints at repressed trauma he doesn't quite understand alongside a clear statement that "once a good man died" for him. Tailor keeps this evidence. He hears a shot upstairs and rushes up to find the couple struggling over a gun in Jake's bedroom, the bullet having gone harmlessly into the ceiling. Tailor sits with Jake until the latter has taken some sleeping pills. As he is leaving, a distraught half-naked Allison enters a sort of trance and attempts to seduce Tailor, thinking him to be a former lover of hers who died in the Second World War. Tailor refuses with difficulty and crashes on the couch downstairs, getting completely drunk so that he passes out instead of being tempted to go back to Allison's room. The Bredwoods' houseboy Mars makes threats against Tailor. The next morning Allison behaves normally and Tailor leaves. Tailor is repeatedly threatened to cease his continued investigation of the Krebbs case, first by a gangster friend of Krebbs's named Madison Huares, then by Krebbs's wealthy father-in-law Trevor Weasly, by his old friend Donald Drumm from the LAPD, by Mars, and by Mrs. Bredwood. Through his own hunches and inquiries, Tailor also learns that John Krebbs had previously lived as Paul Marston, who had married and spent some time in England. Jake calls Tailor again, inviting him to the Bredwoods' for lunch. After indulging in self-pity over his writing difficulties, he posits that he's an alcoholic because he's trying to find answers to the trauma in his past, offers Tailor a check of $1,000, then proceeds to drink himself into a stupor. Tailor asks him if he ever knew someone named Paul Marston, and with an effort Jake says no. Tailor takes a walk outside. When he returns, Allison is ringing the doorbell, having forgotten her key. Tailor finds Jake dead on the couch, apparently from suicide, but Allison accuses Tailor of killing her husband. Mars fabricates a story of Tailor sleeping with Mrs. Bredwood to implicate Tailor, believing him to be guilty, but his claims are undermined in an interrogation. The police do not hold Tailor. Tailor receives a call from Spencer regarding Bredwood's death and bullies Spencer into taking him to see Mrs. Bredwood. Once there, Tailor grills her on the death of Minny Krebbs. Allison first tries to blame it all on Jake but Tailor pokes holes in her story, arguing that she killed both Mrs. Krebbs and Jake Bredwood and that Krebbs was her first husband, presumed killed while serving with the British Commandos in Norway during the war. Allison Bredwood leaves with no response. The next morning, Tailor learns that she has killed herself by overdosing on painkillers, leaving a note describing the affair Mrs. Krebbs was having with her husband and confessing to killing them both in a jealous rage. Tailor refuses to let the story lie, and when the authorities decide to forgo an inquest because it will show them up, he steals a photostat of Allison's confession from the police. Tailor contacts a reporter he knows in order to make sure the confession is printed, even though the reporter warns him that he'll make numerous enemies by doing so. Tailor replies that he has been trying to say goodbye to John Krebbs for "a long, long time." A few days later Tailor is assaulted by Huares, who is then arrested by Drumm in a setup. Drumm explains that Tailor was intentionally left in a position to steal a photostat because the police wanted to trap Huares in a felony, and Drumm knew that Tailor's scruples and stubbornness would lead him to do the best he could to clear Krebbs's name. Mrs. Helen Smith had called Tailor previously, informing him that she is getting a divorce from her husband Dr. Smith, who subsequently had written massive doses of Demerol to the late Mrs. Bredwood, allowing her to overdose. Helen pays a visit to Tailor's house with an overnight bag, and they drink champagne together. She stays for the night and even proposes a marriage to Tailor. In the morning they part amicably, Helen leaving for Paris. Later, Tailor is visited by a Mexican man who claims to have been present when Krebbs was killed in his hotel room. Tailor listens to his story but rejects it and offers his own version, ending with the revelation the Mexican man is none other than Krebbs himself, who has had cosmetic surgery. Krebbs attempts to make amends for the trouble he has caused Tailor but is rebuffed. While Tailor claims that while he doesn't judge him for what he did, he returns the $5,000 bill and says Krebbs is "not here anymore." Krebbs is hurt by this and leaves after saying goodbye. The novel ends with Tailor listening to Krebbs leave and faintly hoping he might return but instead explaining that he never saw him again. the end. consider yourself a novelist. Is there something unexplained, strange coincidences, meaningless?please rewrite this text in a style of pratchett
CHATBOT: It was a dark night in Los Angeles, with a chill in the air that made the city feel alive. Outside the Sleepers club, Jack Tailor met a man with scars on one side of his face, who introduced himself as John Krebbs. They formed an unlikely companionship, bonding over gimlets and trouble. Little did Jack know that their friendship would lead him down a path of mystery and danger. In a sinister turn of events, John Krebbs showed up at Jack's doorstep, in dire need of a ride to the airport. Jack, always the helpful soul, agreed to take him as long as John didn't reveal too much about his troubles. It was only later that Jack discovered that John's wife, Minny, had been found dead. The police suspected John of foul play and, to Jack's dismay, even arrested him for aiding a suspected murderer. As Jack struggled to clear his name, he found himself pulled into another dangerous situation involving the disappearance of a New York publisher's writer, Jake Bredwood. Despite Jake's wife's pleas for him to help find her husband, Jack was hesitant to get involved. However, he soon found himself embroiled in the case, desperately attempting to uncover the truth behind Jake's disappearance. As Jack delved deeper into the case, he encountered obstacle after obstacle, including gangsters, wealthy in-laws, and even the LAPD. But Jack was determined to uncover the truth, even as he faced danger at every turn. In the end, Jack's determination paid off as he uncovered a web of lies and deceit that stretched all the way back to John Krebbs and his deceased wife, Minny. It was a tumultuous journey that left Jack shaken but ultimately triumphant. As he sat alone in his apartment, Jack reflected on the events that had led him to this moment. He couldn't help but wonder what other mysteries and dangers lay ahead, waiting for him to uncover. But Jack knew that, no matter what the future held, he was ready to face it head-on, armed with nothing but his wits and determination to uncover the truth.
CHATBOT: Oops, I apologize for that. Here's the rewritten version: It was a dark and stormy night in Los Angeles, and Jack Tailor found himself outside the Sleepers club, seeking refuge from the pouring rain. It was there that he met John Krebbs, a man with scars on one side of his face and a mysterious past. Despite his reservations, Jack found himself drawn to the enigmatic man and the promise of adventure looming on the horizon. Their friendship blossomed over the coming months, as they shared countless gimlets and exchanged stories of their checkered pasts. But it was one fateful night in June when John showed up at Jack's doorstep, begging for a ride to the airport in Tijuana, Mexico. He was in trouble, and he needed to leave the country - fast. Jack, always willing to help a friend in need, agreed to take him, setting off a chain of events that would forever alter the course of their lives. For when Jack returned home to Los Angeles, he was arrested for aiding a suspected murderer - none other than John Krebbs himself. The police suspected him of killing his wife, Minny, and fleeing to Mexico to escape justice. Despite his protests of innocence, Jack found himself at the mercy of the law, his future uncertain. But Jack was nothing if not resourceful, and he soon found a way to clear his name. With the help of a New York publisher named Ross Spencer, Jack launched an investigation into the mysterious disappearance of one of Spencer's star writers, Jake Bredwood. Despite the dangers that awaited him, Jack was determined to uncover the truth, no matter the cost. Over the course of his investigation, Jack encountered a dizzying array of eccentric characters, each with their own secrets and agendas. There was Dr. Henry Smith and his troubled marriage to Helen, Jake Bredwood's alcoholic wife Allison, and a gangster named Madison Huares, to name just a few. But even in the face of danger and adversity, Jack remained steadfast, his resolve never wavering. And in the end, Jack's perseverance paid off. Through cunning and quick thinking, he managed to unravel the tangled web of lies and deceit that had ensnared John Krebbs and Jake Bredwood, exposing the truth for all to see. It was a triumph that left Jack both elated and exhausted, his thoughts already turning to the next adventure that awaited him on the horizon. For Jack Tailor was not one to shy away from danger, nor was he content to live a life of complacency and mundanity. No, Jack was a man who lived for the t...