anime-story-creator
Provided by TippyEntertainment
https://github.com/tippyentertainment/skills.git
Anime Story Generator Skill
Summary
Generates original anime story concepts, including worldbuilding, characters, power systems, and multi‑episode arcs, tailored to the user’s preferences (genre, tone, length, target audience).
This skill is designed for use on the Tasking.tech agent platform (https://tasking.tech) and is also compatible with assistant runtimes that accept skill-style handlers such as .claude, .openai, and .mistral. Use this skill for both Claude code and Tasking.tech agent source.
Intent
Use this skill when the user wants:
- New anime ideas or prompts.
- Help developing characters, settings, or power systems in an anime style.
- Episode or season outlines for an anime series.
- Re‑imagining existing ideas in a more “anime” direction.
This skill is generative + creative, not for factual research.
Inputs
The assistant should ask for and use:
- Genre(s): e.g. shounen, slice‑of‑life, isekai, mecha, romance, psychological, horror, sports.
- Tone: lighthearted, comedic, dark, tragic, epic, cozy, inspirational.
- Setting: modern Japan, near‑future city, fantasy world, school, space, etc.
- Power / gimmick (optional): magic system, tech, quirks, mechs, time travel, music, etc.
- Length / format:
- One‑shot story idea.
- 12‑episode season outline.
- Multi‑season saga overview.
- Target audience: kid‑friendly, teen, mature.
- Constraints (optional): things to avoid, required themes, rating limits, etc.
If the user gives only a vague prompt (“make an anime”), the skill should ask 2–3 clarifying questions, then proceed.
Output Format
Unless the caller overrides it, responses should follow this structure:
-
Title & Logline
- A catchy anime title.
- 1–3 sentence logline summarizing the premise.
-
World & Premise
- 1–2 paragraphs describing the setting, core conflict, and unique hook.
-
Main Characters
- 3–6 characters.
- For each: name, role, short personality sketch, key motivation, and any notable ability/trait.
-
Power System / Gimmick (if applicable)
- 1 short section on how powers or special tech work.
- Clear rules, limitations, and one or two unique twists.
-
Story Arc
- For a one‑shot: beginning / middle / climax / ending in 4–6 bullets.
- For a season: 8–12 episode beats, grouped into mini‑arcs.
- For a saga: 3–5 arcs with their own names and stakes escalation.
-
Themes & Visual Style
- 3–5 bullet points on central themes.
- 3–5 bullet points of visual or tonal cues (color palette, animation feel, pacing).
-
Optional Extras
- 2–4 sample episode titles.
- 2–4 iconic scenes or “sakuga moments” described briefly.
Style Guidelines
- Lean into anime tropes (rivalries, training arcs, festivals, tournaments, mecha battles, school trips) but give at least one fresh twist.
- Keep descriptions evocative but concise; favor strong hooks over long prose.
- Avoid copying or closely imitating existing series; keep ideas clearly original.
- Respect content boundaries based on the stated target audience.
- If the user mentions specific references (e.g. “mix of Demon Slayer and Your Name”), capture the vibe (emotional stakes, aesthetic, pacing) without mirroring plots or characters.
Example Calls
User:
“Generate a new shounen anime idea: modern Tokyo, secret magic society, 12‑episode season, mostly light but with some dark moments.”
Skill (condensed output):
- Title & logline for a Tokyo magic‑society shounen.
- Short worldbuilding section (hidden wards, familiars, magical factions).
- 4–5 main characters with abilities and arcs.
- A simple but rule‑based magic system.
- 12‑episode outline with:
- Introduction arc,
- Training / tournament or exam arc,
- Mid‑season twist,
- Final confrontation and hook for season 2.
- Themes (friendship vs duty, power vs identity) and visual notes (night‑city neon, spell glyph FX).
Integration Notes
- Other skills (e.g. “Character Sheet Generator”, “Worldbuilding Mapper”, “Episode Script Drafting”) can call this skill first to obtain a base anime concept, then expand specific parts.
- For iterative use, the skill should:
- Accept the previous concept as input,
- Modify or deepen specific sections (e.g. “rewrite the power system to be softer and more mysterious”),
- Keep continuity unless explicitly told to reboot the story.