The problem
When your story spans multiple worlds, timelines, or a detailed canon, memory fails. You establish a rule in one session and violate it six sessions later. You change a detail in chapter three and forget by chapter twelve. The longer and deeper the project, the more contradictions slip through.
Most tools assume a simple structure. You don't write simple structures.
The solution
Fault Node is structured depth. It is built around how complex narratives actually work — layered, interlinked, and detail-heavy.
You can move from the wide view of your entire setting down to details that usually get abandoned in spreadsheets and margin notes. Everything is connected. When you change something, you see the ripple.
The AI layer — Optional, and aware of your world's logic
Turn it on, and the AI connects to commercial LLMs through secure tooling. It understands your existing material — your timeline alterations, your magic system constraints, your character histories — and flags what doesn't hold up. It answers questions like: Does this technology actually work in the history I just altered? or Does this character arc contradict what happened three chapters ago?
It is not a writing assistant that generates prose. It is a logic filter tuned to your specific world.
Turn it off, and everything works. No AI. No external calls. The core engine is complete without it.
Status
Pre-alpha. In daily use by its creator. Not accepting public testers. When it is ready for people outside my own projects, I will open the door. Not before.