# Free Horror Story Generator — Custom Prompts & Exportable Drafts

Instantly create microfiction, flash stories, scene drafts, and podcast-ready horror scripts with tunable prompts, sensitivity controls, and export-friendly text formats.

## Highlights

- Genre-tuned templates for common horror subgenres
- Multi-mode outputs: microfiction to multi-scene outlines
- Sensitivity controls to reduce graphic content while keeping suspense

## Key metrics

- Output modes: Microfiction → Novella outline — Create anything from 50-word creepypasta to multi-beat outlines.
- Formats: Plain text & subtitle-friendly — Export drafts formatted for social posts, manuscripts, or audio scripts.
- Controls: POV, tone, length, sensitivity — Adjust voice and explicitness to match your project and audience.

## Generate exactly the horror piece you need

Pick a structural mode and a tuned template, then set POV, tone, and length. Use short microfiction prompts for shareable posts, flash templates for polished short stories, or scene and script templates when you need a dramatized moment for audio or play. Each template supplies a copyable prompt you can refine and reuse for serial work.

- Microfiction (50–150 words) — quick hooks and final-twist endings.
- Flash story (300–800 words) — focused reveals and atmospheric pacing.
- Scene generator (800–1,500 words) — dialogue-forward scenes with unresolved threats.
- Novella outline (3–7 beats) — story skeletons with recurring motifs.
- Scriptbeat / audio-friendly scenes — sound cues and lines adapted for podcast use.
- RPG hooks and scenario seeds — premise, complications, NPCs, and artifacts.

## Prompt clusters with copyable examples

Use these starter prompts to get a usable draft immediately. Each prompt is formatted for easy reuse in serial or episodic workflows.

### Microfiction (copyable)

Template: "Write a {tone} micro-horror about {character} who discovers {disturbing detail} at {place}. End with a single-sentence twist."

- Example: "Write a tense micro-horror about a babysitter who finds a tiny, empty shoe under the baby's crib. End with a single-sentence twist."

### Flash story (copyable)

Template: "Create a 500-word flash horror in {POV} set in {era/place}. Focus on atmosphere and a reveal that changes what the protagonist thought they knew."

- Example: "Create a 500-word first-person horror in a flooded coastal town where every disrupted reflection shows someone else."

### Scene generator (copyable)

Template: "Write a single scene where {character A} confronts {character B} about {secret}. Keep dialogue taut and end with an unresolved threat."

- Use this when you need a ready-to-perform scene for audio or stage.

### RPG hook (copyable)

Template: "Create a 3-paragraph RPG scenario: premise, escalating complication, and 3 possible player objectives; include 2 NPC seeds and a strange artifact."

- Example use: Drop the three-paragraph seed into a session packet for quick prep.

### Tone & gore control (copyable)

Template: "Produce a {tone: restrained/graphic} horror story about {subject}, keeping explicit content to {sensitivity: low/medium/high}."

- Adjust sensitivity to prepare material for classroom or family-friendly publishing.

## Export & production-ready formatting

Export plain text for manuscripts, subtitle-friendly formatting for audio editors, or line-oriented script beats for podcast producers. Copied output is designed to paste directly into writing apps, audio scripts, or campaign notes for tabletop sessions.

- Plain-text drafts for submission or zine copy.
- Subtitle-friendly cues for sound-driven reveals and production timing.
- Scriptbeat format with sound cues and short dialogue lines for audio dramas.

## Sensitivity & content safety

Toggle sensitivity to reduce explicit gore, sexual content, or graphic violence while preserving suspense and twist mechanics. Use the 'restrained' option for classroom or public-facing pieces and 'medium' when a story requires stronger imagery.

- Safety toggles that tone down graphic descriptions.
- Guidance prompts that shift focus to implication, atmosphere, and psychological dread.
- Advice for teachers on using filtered prompts in the classroom.

## Where this fits in your workflow

Designed to plug into common creative ecosystems: paste drafts into word processors for revision, export scenario seeds for tabletop campaigns, or drop script-formatted scenes into audio production timelines. Prompts are written to be reproducible and editable, so you can reuse a character sketch across episodes.

- Writers: jump past the blank page with themed scaffolds.
- Podcasters: get audio-friendly beats with sound cues.
- RPG GMs: produce compact scenario seeds and NPC sketches.
- Teachers: craft assignment-ready prompts with safety filters.

## Prompt best practices

To reproduce a character or tone across multiple generations, save a short character sketch and motif list in your prompt. Anchor each generation with fixed variables (name, obsession, motif) and adjust only one control at a time — length or tone — to keep outputs consistent.

- Save prompt templates and variable lists to a personal prompt document.
- Use a two-line character sketch (name, obsessive trait) at the top of every prompt.
- For serial work, include recurring motifs and a one-sentence series arc in the prompt.

## Workflow

1. 1. Choose a template
Pick Microfiction, Flash, Scene, Outline, Scriptbeat, or RPG hook depending on your target format.

2. 2. Fill the variables
Add character name, place, disturbing detail, POV, tone, and sensitivity level — keep a short character sketch for serial reuse.

3. 3. Generate and refine
Run the generator, then iterate: tighten dialogue, emphasize sensory detail, and adjust tone or length as needed.

4. 4. Export for production
Choose plain text, subtitle-friendly format, or scriptbeat layout and paste into your writing app, audio editor, or tabletop notes.

5. 5. Publish responsibly
Do a final sensitivity review, confirm permissions for commercial use, and apply any necessary attribution per platform or publisher rules.

## FAQ

### Who owns the stories generated here and can I use them commercially?

Ownership and commercial use depend on the platform's terms of service. Many creators treat generator output as a draft they substantially revise and then publish under their own authorship. Before commercializing, review Texta's terms and consider adding your creative edits to establish authorship.

### How can I reduce gore, sexual content, or other triggers in generated output?

Use the sensitivity control (restrained/medium/graphic) when generating. Prefer implication and sensory detail prompts (e.g., focus on sound and atmosphere rather than explicit description) and run a second pass that replaces graphic phrases with suggestive language.

### How do I get consistent characters and tone across multiple sessions?

Save a short character sketch and a motif checklist, then include them at the top of every prompt. Lock PO V and tone settings between runs and only change scene variables — this makes outputs reproducible while allowing episodic variation.

### What controls exist for length, POV, and subgenre, and can I combine them?

Choose output mode (microfiction, flash, scene, outline), then set POV and tone fields. Controls are designed to be combinable: for example, you can request a first-person, gothic-flavored 800-word scene with restrained sensitivity.

### Which export formats are available for podcast scripts or social posts?

Output is optimized for copy-paste into word processors, subtitle timelines, or simple script layouts with sound cues. Use subtitle-friendly formatting for audio timing and short-line script formats for voice actors.

### What are best practices for turning a generated draft into a polished story or script?

Treat the generator output as a focused first draft: perform a structural pass (check beats and pacing), a sensory pass (enhance concrete detail), and a dialogue pass (tighten lines). For audio, add explicit sound cues and timing notes; for publication, run a sensitivity review.

### Do I need to credit the generator when publishing?

Credit requirements depend on the venue and the platform's policies. Many publishers expect full disclosure for non-original content. When in doubt, consult the publication's submission guidelines and the platform terms.

### How well does the generator adapt to non-English settings and local cultural details?

Language and localization templates let you request the same scene in another language and ask for culturally appropriate details. Always review localized output for authenticity and cultural sensitivity before publication.

### Can teachers use this safely for classroom assignments?

Yes — use the restraint sensitivity setting and classroom-oriented prompts. Review each generation before assigning it to students and tailor content for age-appropriate themes.

### Can I adapt generated RPG seeds or scenario hooks for paid products?

You can use generated seeds as a starting point, but verify platform terms and any third-party licensing that may apply. Substantial revision and original development of the seed will strengthen your ownership claims for commercial products.

## Related pages

- [See pricing and plans](/pricing) — Compare features for personal and team workflows.
- [About Texta](/about) — Learn how Texta approaches creative-writing tools and safety controls.
- [Writing tips and prompts](/blog) — Practical guides for horror pacing, twist mechanics, and audio drama writing.
- [Feature comparison](/comparison) — See how generator modes and safety controls compare to other writing tools.
- [Industries we serve](/industries) — How podcasting, tabletop RPGs, and classrooms use prompt-driven content.

## Start your next horror piece

Use tuned prompts and export-ready drafts to move from idea to production-ready text quickly.

- [Try the free generator](/free-horror-story-generator)
- [Explore pricing](/pricing)