At the dawn of the next age…

Tabletop roleplaying games are having their moment.

Record-high player numbers, TV shows featuring them prominently, even a high-budget movie—it’s an exciting time to be in the community.

And yet, the way we find great ideas and bring them into our games hasn’t changed in 50 years.

Whether we come up with the idea ourselves, read it in a published adventure, or hear it from a creator on social media, we still have to remember it or write it down, then integrate it into the game when the time is right.

How many awesome moments with our friends have we missed because we forgot that idea?

It doesn’t have to be that way anymore.

Infinite Stories is a platform that organizes your character, campaign, or homebrew setting information for you and lets you add ideas from your favorite creators or official publications with a tap or click. Anytime you need the info, our AI synthesizes it for you, in the form you need—even if you’ve forgotten it. All the ideas you’ve put into your game can automatically be used when appropriate.

Here are a few examples of what Infinite Stories can do that we’ve been enjoying so far:

  • The party came back from a few days in a dungeon and wanted to go shopping, but the adventure had a minimal description for the shopkeeper. Infinite Stories combined his description with information about the town’s history and guilds to make a backstory for that shopkeeper, then saved it along with the party’s notes on their interaction so they can be used in the future.

  • Preparing for a session, the GM found some Instagram posts with clever ideas for magic items. She used them as inspiration to create her versions in Infinite Stories, then when the party next was plundering a dragon’s hoard, one of them showed up in Infinite Stories’ auto-generated loot table. (If the Instagram creator was on Infinite Stories, our GM could have just followed them!)

  • In a 5E game, the party bard cast Vicious Mockery on an orc king and asked Infinite Stories for an appropriately poetic insult. It used the king’s backstory and history with the party to write a short rhyming poem that the bard then delivered with glee.

Want to try Infinite Stories for yourself? Want to be one of the first creators on the platform? Join Early Access—and let us know what other features you want to see!