Lore
Continuity for long-form work — characters, terms, canon, and timeline tracked so nothing contradicts itself across a book-length corpus.
In the constellation
Lore highlighted in the live map — hover or tap any node to explore.
Why it exists
In any book-length work — a novel, a worldbuilding bible, a multi-volume manual — characters, invented terms, and the timeline have to stay consistent across hundreds of pages. Checked by hand, continuity breaks slip through: a name that shifts spelling, an event that contradicts an earlier one.
A continuity bible maintained in a spreadsheet is the usual fix, and it’s always one edit behind the manuscript.
What Lore is
Lore is a continuity engine for long-form work. It tracks the canon — characters, places, terminology, timeline — across an entire corpus and flags the contradictions, citing the passages that conflict.
It flags; the author decides. Whether a contradiction is an intentional twist or a genuine error is a creative call that always stays with the writer — Lore proposes, never overrides, and never writes the prose.
What it does
Canon tracking
Characters, places, objects, and invented terms tracked consistently across the whole work.
Timeline modelling
Events ordered and checked for chronological consistency across volumes.
Contradiction detection
Claims across the corpus checked against each other; the conflicts humans miss are surfaced.
Continuity-break flags
Each break proposed to the author with the conflicting passages cited — never silently changed.
The line between judgment and machinery
AccelMars draws one hard line through every product: what an AI decides, and what runs deterministically. Lore sits on the boundary — and keeps the two honest.
What the AI does
- Detect contradictions across a long corpus
- Recognize when an entity or term has drifted
- Surface continuity breaks worth a look
What stays deterministic
- Entity and terminology tracking
- Timeline ordering and consistency checks
- The canon record of who and what
Lore flags; the author decides. The AI catches the breaks across hundreds of pages; the “intentional twist or error?” call is the author’s alone. Note this is not the Canon engine — that handles document structure; Lore handles story continuity.
Planned — designed, not yet built. It will power the built-in continuity bible behind Continuum, the long-form writing app.
Open-core, like Anchor and Booster — the mechanical engine in the open.