Dex-chan lover
- Joined
- Jun 18, 2018
- Messages
- 2,249
In the past, tired of the Isekai Slop dominating everything and reading comments that it was so uninspired that it probably was written by AI, I made ChatGPT give me a pitch for a fantasy manga, as I found it interesting to test that claim. Result? The AI produced something more honest than any of the hacks that dominate the industry. It was a more standard fantasy manga, but the pitch promised something really solid.
Just now I made one again and... Yeah, that actually sounds interesting.
I would say that, if a Mangaka actually would write based on this pitch, they would produce something that blows the Front page Popular Section out of the water, heck, I would read this.
And no, this does not mean that actual Manga Writers can pack up and that they are obsolete, or whatever the AI fanatics are saying.
It is more, that the bar of what is considered acceptable has got way too low. I know that it was since ever that every creative medium in existence is more or less 90% garbage, but it kinda has become that garbage is gaining publicity, which I find honestly damaging to the medium more than AI is.
I guess the verdict I pull from this is that there should be a culture shift where slop creation is less tolerated and there is no "Oh, I read this trash anyways" anymore.
Just now I made one again and... Yeah, that actually sounds interesting.
ChatGPT: Alright — let’s make an isekai pitch that’s not just "Guy gets truck-kun’d and gets cheat powers" but something that actually feels fresh, layered, and worth turning pages for.
Genre: Fantasy, Mystery, Psychological Drama, Isekai
Kaori Minase, a burned-out archivist in modern-day Tokyo, dies—not in a blaze of glory, but in a quiet library collapse after a freak earthquake. She wakes to find herself in an infinite, surreal library adrift in a void.
This place, The Archive, holds records of every world that has ever existed—and Kaori has been appointed its first “Field Archivist.” Her task: travel into endangered worlds, gather key events for the Archive, and try to stabilize them before they collapse into nothing.
The catch?
Kaori’s first mission drops her in a desert city built atop a sleeping dragon’s spine. The city thrives on the dragon’s heat but faces collapse when its “heartbeat” begins to slow. As Kaori investigates ancient records, she learns that the heartbeat slows every time the ruling council censors the city’s history. The more the truth is erased, the closer the dragon is to death.
To save the city, she must risk violating the Archive’s prime directive: Never destroy a record.
If you want, I can also mock up volume 1’s cover concept and chapter titles so it feels like a real manga pitch ready for a publisher. Would you like me to do that?
Alright — here’s the full pitch package for The Archive Between Worlds, ready to hand to a manga editor like we’re serious about serialization.
Genre: Fantasy · Mystery · Psychological Drama · Isekai
Target Audience: Seinen/Josei crossover
When archivist Kaori Minase dies in an earthquake, she awakens in an impossible library — an endless vault holding the records of every world. Tasked as the first Field Archivist, she must travel into unstable worlds to retrieve their final stories before they collapse into nothing.
Her first mission sends her to the desert city of Sah-Draal, built atop a sleeping dragon’s spine. The city thrives on its warmth — but the dragon’s heartbeat is slowing. The ruling council blames magic decay, but Kaori’s investigation reveals something more insidious: the erasure of truth from history itself.
To save the city, Kaori must break the Archive’s greatest law — and in doing so, begin to lose the pieces of herself that made her human.
Each new volume takes Kaori to a new world:
Over time, Kaori’s personality, voice, and memories begin to fracture, making the reader question whether the “Archivist” is even Kaori anymore.
If you want, I can also make a mock manga cover illustration for Volume 1 so you can actually see what it would look like on a shelf.
Do you want me to design that next?
Title: The Archive Between Worlds
Genre: Fantasy, Mystery, Psychological Drama, Isekai
Premise:
Kaori Minase, a burned-out archivist in modern-day Tokyo, dies—not in a blaze of glory, but in a quiet library collapse after a freak earthquake. She wakes to find herself in an infinite, surreal library adrift in a void.
This place, The Archive, holds records of every world that has ever existed—and Kaori has been appointed its first “Field Archivist.” Her task: travel into endangered worlds, gather key events for the Archive, and try to stabilize them before they collapse into nothing.
The catch?
- She cannot alter major events unless she finds the “Thread of Origin” — the one secret tying the fate of the world together.
- The Archive’s records are incomplete, meaning she must piece together history as she lives among the people.
- Every “saved” world changes her — she takes memories, scars, and fragments of personality from her alternate selves who might have existed there.
Why it works:
- Mystery over raw power fantasy: The hook is figuring out the “Thread of Origin” in each world — part detective story, part cultural immersion.
- Emotional stakes: She loses herself bit by bit. By book 3, readers might question if the Kaori we met is still the same person.
- Diverse worlds, consistent purpose: Each arc is a self-contained world with its own culture, magic rules, and conflicts — but the Archive’s looming mystery ties them together.
- Twist on isekai tropes: Instead of escaping from a dull life, she’s forced to return to The Archive after every mission. Going home is impossible; moving forward means becoming less human.
Sample First Arc:
Kaori’s first mission drops her in a desert city built atop a sleeping dragon’s spine. The city thrives on the dragon’s heat but faces collapse when its “heartbeat” begins to slow. As Kaori investigates ancient records, she learns that the heartbeat slows every time the ruling council censors the city’s history. The more the truth is erased, the closer the dragon is to death.
To save the city, she must risk violating the Archive’s prime directive: Never destroy a record.
Series Theme:
Every world has a story worth preserving — but at what cost to the storyteller?
If you want, I can also mock up volume 1’s cover concept and chapter titles so it feels like a real manga pitch ready for a publisher. Would you like me to do that?
Alright — here’s the full pitch package for The Archive Between Worlds, ready to hand to a manga editor like we’re serious about serialization.
Volume 1 Pitch Package
Title: The Archive Between Worlds
Genre: Fantasy · Mystery · Psychological Drama · Isekai
Target Audience: Seinen/Josei crossover
Cover Concept (Volume 1)
- Foreground: Kaori kneeling on a suspended bookshelf in the void, holding a lantern whose light spills into the darkness, revealing fragments of floating books and scrolls.
- Background: A massive shadowy silhouette of The Archive, its shelves curving into infinity. Some shelves are on fire, others vanish into mist.
- Tone: Muted colors (sepia, dark teal) with gold accents for the lantern glow.
- Visual Hook: The light from Kaori’s lantern is also forming the spine of a sleeping dragon — a hint at the first arc’s world.
Volume 1 Synopsis:
When archivist Kaori Minase dies in an earthquake, she awakens in an impossible library — an endless vault holding the records of every world. Tasked as the first Field Archivist, she must travel into unstable worlds to retrieve their final stories before they collapse into nothing.
Her first mission sends her to the desert city of Sah-Draal, built atop a sleeping dragon’s spine. The city thrives on its warmth — but the dragon’s heartbeat is slowing. The ruling council blames magic decay, but Kaori’s investigation reveals something more insidious: the erasure of truth from history itself.
To save the city, Kaori must break the Archive’s greatest law — and in doing so, begin to lose the pieces of herself that made her human.
Chapter List (Volume 1)
- A Silence in the Stacks — Kaori’s death and awakening in the void library.
- The Thread of Origin — The Librarian’s rules, and the first assignment.
- A City on the Dragon’s Spine — Arrival in Sah-Draal.
- Heartbeat of Ash — First signs that the dragon is dying.
- The Censors’ Quill — Evidence of altered histories.
- The Forbidden Shelf — A missing record the Archive never received.
- Dragon’s Truth — The choice between preserving law or preserving life.
- Return to the Void — The first price Kaori pays.
Long-Term Series Arc:
Each new volume takes Kaori to a new world:
- Vol. 2: A drowned kingdom where the sky is a ceiling of water.
- Vol. 3: A forest where time grows on trees.
- Vol. 4+: Hints that someone else is erasing worlds on purpose — and they may be another Field Archivist.
Over time, Kaori’s personality, voice, and memories begin to fracture, making the reader question whether the “Archivist” is even Kaori anymore.
If you want, I can also make a mock manga cover illustration for Volume 1 so you can actually see what it would look like on a shelf.
Do you want me to design that next?
I would say that, if a Mangaka actually would write based on this pitch, they would produce something that blows the Front page Popular Section out of the water, heck, I would read this.
And no, this does not mean that actual Manga Writers can pack up and that they are obsolete, or whatever the AI fanatics are saying.
It is more, that the bar of what is considered acceptable has got way too low. I know that it was since ever that every creative medium in existence is more or less 90% garbage, but it kinda has become that garbage is gaining publicity, which I find honestly damaging to the medium more than AI is.
I guess the verdict I pull from this is that there should be a culture shift where slop creation is less tolerated and there is no "Oh, I read this trash anyways" anymore.