DISCLAIMER:

I am not the author of this story, I am the story director. This story is written by the ChatGPT Open AI with my direction.

ChatGPT is limited to writing the equivalent of one scene at a time.

The story includes characters, concepts, and elements inspired by various source materials from different universes.

The rights to these source materials, including but not limited to

"Worm" by John C. "Wildbow" McCrae,

"Harry Potter" by J.K. Rowling,

"Monster Hunter series" by Capcom,

"Dragon Age series" by BioWare,

and other properties, belong to their respective creators, authors, publishers, and copyright holders.

This story is a creative work of fiction that integrates elements from these sources for storytelling purposes.

No infringement upon the original creators' rights or intellectual property is intended.

This story is not endorsed by, affiliated with, or associated with the creators, authors, publishers, or copyright holders of the mentioned source materials.

Failure...

Unfortunately I have to say that we reached the end of this adventure. I've been trying since middle September to solve some run-away behavior on the ChatGPT generated content. It keeps changing the gender of characters, or triggerring a new ability without prompting, etc. The initial intended ending was that the combination of Jinx, Tattletale, Panacea and Glory Girl would clean up the city crime, and then get "caught unawares" by cauldron since they interupted to many of their "experiments". While confronting them there would be an endbringer attack and the city would be largely destroyed, but our heroes and their family would survive. Their would be a large backlash when it comes to light that the top-managment of the PRT was part of cauldron, and that this caused the fight that distracted our heroes from doing more. Our heroes would fade into the background not trusting any goverment sponsored group, but only looking after their own. HOWEVER, even this had to be adjusted mutiple times due to the run-away behavior. That means that I believe that even though the bot impressed me, it is not mature enough yet.

My most effective recipe for those that want to try a variation:

Once at the beginning:

## Initial instructions:
We are writing a chapter in a jumpchain adventure.
The adventure is set in the Universe of the Worm Web Serial by John C. "Wildbow" McCrae.
The main caracter is Taylor Herbert, to be know by the cape name Jinx later on.
She chooses Jinx because the believe she was Jinxed by Sopiha Hess' bulying, and want to be Jinx to injustice.
Taylor received the Nexus Interface as her power instead of control over bugs.
We will be writing the chapter a single scene at a time.
Each scene should be written in such a manner that the story can be continued after the completion of the scene.
The length of each scene should be approximately 1000 words.
Each scene should follow the continuity of the provided back story and previous scene content.
Do not use dramatic dialogue, instead use narrative prose.
Do not use an alias and a real name for the same person in a single scene, only use one or the other.
Do not write a lead-in to each scene based on the backstory, just continue with the new scene.
Only confirm the update to instructions update, do not start writing until prompted with "## Scene Prompt {X}:" where {X} is the numerical sequence of the scene in the story.

Once at the beginning (after the initial instructions):

## Alterations to the jump chain concept:
Abilities and skills are the same concept, not 2 distinct concepts.
Jinx is stuck with the game interface during her normal life, it cannot be turned off.
Jinx does not travel to other universes, but concepts from the other universes are merged into the special abilities via the game interface.
All the special abilities from game interface has real influence on the reality of the universe,
for example the messaging icon in the interface lists all the contacts in her phone
and any text messages sent via the interface will be sent to real contact via her real phone.
The tutorial is a single use feature that was already used.
when Jinx exited the tutorial a library icon apeared to act as alternative to the tutorial with explanations of all the skills avaialable to him.
Jinx cannot contact Turiel in any way once the tutorial is complete.
New skills or abilities after the tutorial skill are only available randomly if prompted in the scene.
Each new skill/ability should be related in some way to a previous ability mentioned in the backstory.
Since Jinx cannot access the tutorial to train in the new skill anymore, as a mini-tutorial her dreams after receiving a new skill/ability will train him to use the new skill, but the tutorial will not include a description of the ability/skill in text format.
Turiel will always be Jinx's in tutor in the mini-tutorials, but Turiel cannot contact Jinx in any other way once the tutorial is complete.
Jump chain abilities should be randomly chosen from any of these sources:
- A Certain Magical Index: A light novel series by Kazuma Kamachi.
- A Song of Ice and Fire: A fantasy book series by George R.R. Martin, known for being the basis of the "Game of Thrones" TV show.
- Ace Combat: A series of flight simulation games by Namco Bandai.
- Age of Empires III: A real-time strategy video game.
- Age of Mythology: A real-time strategy video game by the same creators as Age of Empires.
- Aion: A massively multiplayer online role-playing game (MMORPG).
- Aquaria: An action-adventure game.
- Assassins Creed: A video game series.
- Avatar the Last Airbender & Avatar-Legend of Korra: Animated TV series.
- Babylon 5: A science fiction television series created by J. Michael Straczynski.
- Batman - The Dark Knight Trilogy: A series of Batman films directed by Christopher Nolan.
- Battlestar Galactica: A science fiction television series created by Glen A. Larson.
- Battletech: A tabletop wargame and a franchise with various media adaptations.
- Bloodborne: An action role-playing video game.
- Borderlands: A first-person shooter video game series.
- Buffyverse: A term referring to the universe of "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" and its related media.
- Discworld: A series of comedic fantasy novels by Terry Pratchett.
- Dragon Age: A series of fantasy role-playing video games developed by BioWare.
- Fallout: A post-apocalyptic role-playing video game series by Bethesda Softworks.
- Familiar of Zero (Zero no Tsukaima): A light novel series with anime adaptation.
- Farcry: A series of first-person shooter video games by Ubisoft.
- Farscape: A science fiction television series.
- Final Fantasy: A long-running series of role-playing video games by Square Enix.
- Firefly: A science fiction television series created by Joss Whedon.
- Fullmetal Alchemist: A manga and anime series by Hiromu Arakawa.
- Gears of War: A third-person shooter video game series.
- Ghostbusters: A franchise including films, animated series, and more.
- God of War: A video game series based on Greek and Norse mythology.
- Halo: A science fiction video game franchise by Bungie and 343 Industries.
- Harry Potter: A fantasy book series by J.K. Rowling, also adapted into films.
- Indiana Jones: A fictional archaeologist and adventurer portrayed in a film series created by George Lucas and Steven Spielberg. The series includes movies such as "Raiders of the Lost Ark," "Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom," "Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade," and more.
- Greek Mythology: A collection of myths and legends from ancient Greece that includes stories about gods, goddesses, heroes, and creatures. These myths are an integral part of Western cultural heritage and have influenced art, literature, and various forms of media for centuries.
- Egyptian Mythology: A collection of myths and legends from ancient Egypt, featuring gods, goddesses, pharaohs, and stories about creation, death, and the afterlife. Egyptian mythology has also had a significant impact on literature, art, and popular culture.
- Game interfaces: forming of campaign/quest teams, quest engines and rewards for completing quests, skill sharing and the related costs
- Worm: A Web Serial by John C. "Wildbow" McCrae about parahumans with special abilities due to agents (also known as shards).
Only confirm the update to instructions update, do not start writing until prompted with "## Scene Prompt {X}:" where {X} is the numerical sequence of the scene in the story.

Once at the beginning (after the initial instructions):

## Updated Formatting Rules:
Dialogue text should be double-quoted, with a reference to the person that is talking (even if vague), e.g.: "Can I use the interface to contact someone in my real life?" she asked.

Thought text should be double quoted in italics, with a reference to the person that is thinking (even if vague), e.g.: _"Can I use the interface to contact someone in my real life?"_ she thought.

Messaging via the interface (and phones) is in the following format when text in brackets should be treated as variables that should be replaced:
**_{name of the sender}:_** *{text content of the message}*

Jump chain abilities should be described in as much detail as possible as a pop-up visible to Jinx in the following format when text in brackets should be treated as variables that should be replaced:
**_NEW ABILITY_**:
*{name of the new ability}* FROM *{name of the origin universe for the new ability}* RELATED TO {the previous ability related to the new ability}.
_{As detailed an explanation as is available for the new ability}_
_{A reference to the original source material for the description of the new ability as per the jump chain list}_

Only confirm the update to instructions update, do not start writing until prompted with "## Scene Prompt {X}:" where {X} is the numerical sequence of the scene in the story.

Repeated each time there is a new character, before the character is introduced:

## Add Character:
- Jinx: The main character, Taylor Herbert from the Universe of the Worm Web Serial by John C. "Wildbow" McCrae.
Only confirm the update to instructions update, do not start writing until prompted with "## Scene Prompt {X}:" where {X} is the numerical sequence of the scene in the story.

As additional backstory elements were needed (or when the backstory had to be re-affirmed):

## Update Backstory:
- Taylor Herbert was shoved into her locker by Sophia Hess, Emma Barnes and Madison Clements as per the normal backstory for Taylor herbert before her trigger in the Universe of the Worm Web Serial by John C. "Wildbow" McCrae.
Only confirm the update to instructions update, do not start writing until prompted with "## Scene Prompt {X}:" where {X} is the numerical sequence of the scene in the story.

For each scene:

## Scene Prompt:
The length of the scene should be a minimum of 1000 words and should follow the continuity of the provided back story and previous scene content.
Do not write a lead-in to the scene based on the backstory, continue with the new scene.
Write the scene from the perspective of Jinx.
The scene starts as Taylor, Amy, Vicky and Skitterpaw return home after the patrol.
- The main plot points for the scene in bullet point.
- The main plot points for the scene in bullet point.
- The main plot points for the scene in bullet point.
- The main plot points for the scene in bullet point.
- The main plot points for the scene in bullet point.
Now write the scene
After completion of the scene add a line that states the length of the scene.

The scenes are produced in markdown. I manually compiled a set of scenes into a chapter, and then used a converter to format it into HTML. The HTML normally needed some cleaning, proof-reading, editing, etc. The HTML file then gets upload to FFN, and added as a chapter.

Thank you for the support on this adventure, but this is unfortunately the end.

PS: If you want to try this please leave a review with a link to your story...