Character Details
The Character Details page gathers everything known about one character so you can check continuity, prepare scenes and see how the story has changed them.
CharactersCharacters
Relationship Events record scene moments where a relationship changes, becomes known, intensifies or shifts direction.
Tags: characters, relationships, events, evolution, scenes
Relationship Events are the story moments that change a relationship. They explain how the story moves from the initial baseline to the current relationship state.
Use this section to review changes such as a confession, betrayal, rescue, discovery, argument, reveal, apology, alliance or power shift. A relationship event should be tied to the scene where the change happens.
Scan the events in story order. Each entry shows the characters involved, the scene, the relationship type, the state or awareness change and the intensity. Open the scene when you need to check whether the event is visible on the page and whether later scenes respect it.
| Field | What it means | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Scene | The moment in the story where the relationship changes. | Chapter 8, Scene 3: Beth discovers the lie. |
| Relationship state | The new state created by the event. | Suspicious, allied, estranged, protective. |
| Awareness | Whether the other character knows or understands the relationship change. | One character knows the betrayal; the other still believes the friendship is intact. |
| Confidence / intensity | How strong or emotionally charged the change is. | A mild doubt might be 3; a devastating betrayal might be 10. |
| Description | The writer-facing explanation of what changed and why. | "Beth trusts Annie less after seeing the hidden letter." |
|---|
If Beth protects Maggie in Chapter 17, that scene may move the relationship from suspicion to trust. If Maggie later learns Beth had a hidden motive, add another event rather than overwriting the earlier trust.
Not every interaction needs an event. Add one when the relationship's future behavior, reader understanding or continuity depends on remembering the change.
The Character Details page gathers everything known about one character so you can check continuity, prepare scenes and see how the story has changed them.
CharactersCharacters help you manage your cast, follow their story presence and keep emotional and relationship continuity clear.
CharactersUse low values for weak or uncertain connections and high values for powerful trust, hatred, fear, loyalty or emotional weight.
CharactersCurrent Relationships show where each relationship stands now, based on the initial baseline and later relationship events.
CharactersChoose the earliest book where this starting relationship matters.
Characters