Create captivating love stories with unique characters, enchanting settings, and engaging plots tailored to your preferences
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Simple steps to create amazing results
Select your preferred romance subgenre - whether it's contemporary, historical, paranormal, fantasy, or any other style that captures your imagination.
Describe your main characters, desired setting, relationship dynamics, and any specific tropes or plot elements you want included in your story.
Click generate to receive your custom romance story. Review the output and regenerate with adjusted parameters if you want to explore different directions.
Powerful capabilities at your fingertips
Generate stories across all romance categories including contemporary, historical, paranormal, fantasy, sci-fi, romantic suspense, and more.
Incorporate popular romance tropes like enemies-to-lovers, second chance, forbidden love, fake dating, or create unique combinations tailored to your vision.
Define detailed character profiles including personalities, backgrounds, motivations, and chemistry to bring your protagonists to life.
Choose from sweet and simple to complex multi-layered plots with subplots, conflicts, and satisfying romantic arcs.
Generate anything from short romantic scenes and flash fiction to full-length novel outlines with detailed chapter breakdowns.
Download your generated stories in multiple formats for easy editing, sharing, or integration into your writing projects.
Romance fiction generates over $1.08 billion annually in sales, making it the largest share of the consumer book market at roughly 23% of all fiction sales.
The romance story dates back to ancient Greece with works like 'Daphnis and Chloe' (2nd century AD), considered one of the earliest surviving romance novels in Western literature.
The Romance Writers of America defines two non-negotiable elements: a central love story and an emotionally satisfying 'Happily Ever After' (HEA) or 'Happy For Now' (HFN) ending.
The modern romance genre exploded in 1740 with Samuel Richardson's 'Pamela,' which became so popular that fans wore Pamela-themed fans and playing cards were created featuring scenes from the novel.
Harlequin romance novels follow strict word count requirements (typically 50,000-55,000 words) and publish over 110 titles per month across multiple imprint lines.
Romance fiction now encompasses over 20 distinct subgenres, from paranormal and sci-fi romance to Amish romance, which emerged as a bestselling category in the 2000s.
82% of romance readers are women, but the male readership has grown significantly, with men now comprising 18% of the audience according to 2016 Nielsen surveys.
Georgette Heyer single-handedly created the Regency romance subgenre in 1921 with 'The Black Moth,' spawning a category that remains wildly popular over a century later.
Barbara Cartland, listed in the Guinness Book of World Records, wrote 723 romance novels during her lifetime and once completed 26 books in a single year.
Romance fiction led the e-book revolution, with digital formats accounting for 44% of romance sales by 2013—significantly higher than any other genre's digital adoption rate.
The 1970s-1980s 'bodice ripper' era began with Kathleen Woodiwiss's 'The Flame and the Flower' (1972), which sold over 4.5 million copies and revolutionized historical romance with explicit love scenes.
Mills & Boon, founded in 1908, publishes romance novels in over 26 languages across 100+ international markets and releases approximately 700 new titles annually.
Everything you need to know
Start generating captivating romance stories in seconds. From meet-cute to happily ever after, bring your romantic vision to life.