Genre guide

Fantasy continuity checker for worlds, magic, and long casts

Check fantasy manuscripts for world rules, invented terminology, ranks, factions, locations, prophecies, timeline issues, and character drift.

Fantasy

Continuity pressure points

Fantasy continuity is hard because the manuscript often carries invented systems as well as ordinary story facts. Wise Wombat helps authors review magic rules, titles, factions, maps, prophecies, names, and long-running setup.

World rules

Magic, law, religion, institutions, geography, social rules, and exceptions that need setup.

Terminology

Invented terms, ranks, faction names, place names, capitalization, pluralization, and titles.

Prophecies and promises

Warnings, vows, clues, rituals, artifacts, and callbacks that need payoff.

Large-cast continuity

Names, titles, relationships, knowledge, presence, and shifting alliances.

Examples

What Wise Wombat can help surface

These are fictional examples of the kinds of continuity problems authors often review in this genre.

A magic rule has one cost in chapter 3 and a different cost in chapter 20.

A royal title changes capitalization and social meaning between scenes.

A prophecy is treated as central but does not return during the resolution.

FAQ

Common questions

Genre-specific continuity checks still point back to author decisions and manuscript evidence.

Can Wise Wombat check invented terminology?

Yes. World terminology is one of the continuity categories Wise Wombat checks.

Does fantasy continuity include maps?

Wise Wombat can flag location and travel contradictions in the manuscript text, but it does not replace a dedicated map review.

Run a pass

Check your own fantasy draft.

Start free assessment