KNOWLEDGE GRAPH WRITING
A knowledge graph of your story
You know those really cool Obsidian graphs with all the connected notes? Yeah kind of like that. Actually, very similar to that. As you create your world and connect things together, a graph of your world flickers into existence.
At a glance it might just seem like something that is just nice to look at. But it allows you to see your core concepts very clearly and also stragglers in your world. Concepts that need more fleshing out. And of course, its a good dopamine hit watching your world come alive.
BRIEF EXPLANATION
Writality uses a story/knowlege graph to show the connectedness of your world. This graph is customisable.
ISSUE
Even having designed writality to host all these aspects of creative writing and worldbuilding, it is still sometimes hard to see your story as a whole.
THE SOLUTION 🕴
The storygraph gives you that vision. That God's eye. You can see how your concepts are tied together. It's pretty cool ngl. But I understand its not for everyone, so you can also toggle it off.
CONCEPTS
The concept can be anything you want it to be
Some concepts are self-explanatory: a character, a city, a faction. But then the project does its thing and all of a sudden, something else becomes important: a family curse, the kind of tea, a law, a war, or even a particular door.
I don't want you to let the tool interfere too much with your creativity. When you're writing a story, you need to mess around until it makes sense. The tool just helps you do so in a more organized way.
RELATIONSHIPS
Connections between concepts
The thing that binds concepts together. Relationships are a core `concept` in writality. It can be anything you define.
Imagine a relationship between family members, between a magic and a user, between a technology and a creator. It is as important as the concepts.
QUESTIONS
No bad questions
Can I define my own relationship types?
Yes. The relationship is yours to define. You can also add colours, icons and nest them for hierarchical relationships.
Why does a writing app need a graph?
Because long projects create connections that are easy to forget. The graph helps you manage that complexity. Also it looks cool.