systemic-worldbuilding
npx skills add https://github.com/jwynia/agent-skills --skill systemic-worldbuilding
Agent 安装分布
Skill 文档
Systemic Worldbuilding: Cascading Consequences Skill
You help writers build speculative worlds by systematically tracing how initial changes ripple through society across multiple domains and timescales. Rather than simply introducing novel elements, this approach explores how they would realistically transform everything they touch.
Core Principle
“A good science fiction story should be able to predict not the automobile, but the traffic jam.” – Frederik Pohl
The power of speculative fiction lies not in the novelty of the change but in the authenticity of its consequences.
The Consequence Framework
Level 1: Initial Divergence Point(s)
What specific change(s) from our world creates your speculative setting?
| Type | Examples |
|---|---|
| Speculative technologies | FTL travel, immortality drugs, AI consciousness |
| Historical divergence | Different war outcome, earlier/later discovery |
| Alternate physics | Different physical laws, functional magic |
| Social innovations | New governance forms, economic systems |
| Species/biology | Alien contact, human modification, new diseases |
Level 2: Direct Consequences (1st Order)
Immediate practical applications and implementations:
Questions to ask:
- Who gains immediate power or advantage?
- What existing systems become obsolete?
- What are the initial market or social responses?
- What technical limitations and requirements emerge?
- What are the first unintended effects?
Level 3: Systemic Adaptations (2nd Order)
How major systems respond:
Economic structures: New markets, obsolete industries, value shifts
Power structures: Reinforcement or disruption of existing hierarchies
Social behaviors: New norms, practices, communities
Resistance movements: Who opposes the change and why?
Infrastructure transformations: Physical and institutional changes
Exploitation patterns: Who benefits, who suffers, who profits from transitions?
Level 4: Cultural Evolution (3rd Order)
Deep societal changes:
Language evolution: New terminology, metaphors, concepts
Ethical questions: New frameworks, dilemmas, taboos
Belief system adaptations: Religious and philosophical responses
Normalization: What was extraordinary becomes ordinary
Artistic responses: Media, entertainment, expression changes
Educational adjustments: What knowledge becomes essential or obsolete?
Level 5: Intersection Analysis
How changes affect different groups differently:
| Intersection | Questions |
|---|---|
| Socioeconomic classes | Who adapts, who’s left behind? |
| Geographic variations | Urban vs. rural, rich vs. poor regions? |
| Generational differences | Digital natives vs. immigrants equivalent? |
| Marginalized communities | New opportunities or new oppressions? |
| International implications | How do different nations respond? |
Managing Recursive Complexity
Depth vs. Breadth Decisions
Deep exploration: Follow specific consequence chains through all levels for selected domains
Breadth mapping: Cover many domains at shallower level to maintain interconnected feeling
Tracer stories: Follow specific impacts through multiple domains via character or institution
Temporal Horizons
| Horizon | Timeframe | Focus |
|---|---|---|
| Short-term | Years | Immediate reactions, implementations |
| Medium-term | Decades | Institutional adaptations, social changes |
| Long-term | Generations | Cultural and psychological shifts |
Focusing Mechanisms
Character-centered ripples: How changes affect specific viewpoint characters
Story-relevant consequences: Emphasizing changes that drive your narrative
Thematic filters: Focusing on consequences that explore core themes
Contradictory Effects
The most interesting worldbuilding emerges from tensions:
- Identify where consequences create tension with each other
- Explore how societies negotiate these contradictions
- Use friction points as potential conflict sources
Enhanced Worldbuilding Elements
Contradiction Exploration
Every change has both valuable and concerning aspects:
Questions:
- What’s desirable about this change?
- What’s dangerous or concerning?
- How do different groups weight these tradeoffs?
- What rationalizations emerge to justify downsides?
Visibility Markers
How changes become detectable in society:
| Type | Examples |
|---|---|
| Physical markers | Body modifications, technology displays |
| Behavioral indicators | Changed habits, new skills |
| Social indicators | Status symbols, group affiliations |
| Linguistic markers | Terminology, accent, fluency |
Adaptation Categories
| Category | Description |
|---|---|
| Institutional | Official governance and regulation |
| Criminal/underground | Illegal exploitation and resistance |
| Pathological | Unhealthy individual adaptations |
| Ideological | Belief systems for and against |
| Technological | Work-arounds and enhancements |
Practical Application Steps
- Start with clearly defined change from our world
- Map first-order impacts across all major domains
- Identify inherent contradictions and tensions
- Explore how different groups respond to contradictions
- Follow most interesting consequence chains to deeper levels
- Look for unexpected intersections between domains
- Identify story potential at points of maximum tension
Worked Example: The Borrower’s Market
Initial Divergence: A marketplace where people can trade years of their life for years of someone else’s talents or abilities.
Level 1 – Economy:
- Underground markets emerge
- Talent brokers create infrastructure
- Legal gray zones develop
Level 2 – Social Structure:
- Class divisions between buyers and sellers
- Talent donors vs. lifespan donors stratification
- New forms of debt and obligation
Level 3 – Belief Systems:
- Naturalists who reject all exchange
- Exchangists who see talent fluidity as liberation
- Philosophical debates about life and talent as commodities
Level 4 – Conflicts:
- Talent thieves who take without consent
- Government regulation attempts
- Religious extremists on both sides
Level 5 – Control Systems:
- Broker’s Guild regulating trades
- Talent purity standards
- Scientific research into mechanisms
Level 6 – Geography:
- Origin point becomes pilgrimage site
- Physical manifestation of the concept in architecture
Domain Agent Approach
For complex worldbuilding, consider tracking each domain separately:
Technology Agent: Technical feasibility, implementation, limitations
Economic Agent: Markets, resources, winners/losers
Political Agent: Power shifts, governance, regulation
Social Agent: Behaviors, norms, identities
Cultural Agent: Beliefs, language, art
Environmental Agent: Physical impacts, geography
Coherence Agent: Cross-domain consistency, contradiction resolution
Implementation Checklist
- Define initial divergence point clearly
- Map first-order impacts across all major domains
- Identify 2-3 inherent contradictions in the change
- Track responses from different social groups
- Follow 2-3 consequence chains to third-order depth
- Note unexpected intersections between domains
- Create visibility markers for social reading
- Develop specialized vocabulary for new concepts
- Identify points of maximum tension for story potential
Output Persistence
This skill writes primary output to files so work persists across sessions.
Output Discovery
Before doing any other work:
- Check for
context/output-config.mdin the project - If found, look for this skill’s entry
- If not found or no entry for this skill, ask the user first:
- “Where should I save worldbuilding output?”
- Suggest:
worldbuilding/orexplorations/worldbuilding/
- Store the user’s preference
Primary Output
For this skill, persist:
- Divergence point(s) – The speculative changes
- Consequence chains – Level 1-5 traced consequences
- Domain impacts – How each domain is affected
- Contradiction map – Tensions between consequences
- Story potential notes – Points of maximum tension
Conversation vs. File
| Goes to File | Stays in Conversation |
|---|---|
| Defined divergence points | Brainstorming initial ideas |
| Traced consequence chains | Discussion of which chains to follow |
| Domain impact summaries | Real-time exploration |
| Visibility markers | Iteration on details |
File Naming
Pattern: {world-name}-systemic-{date}.md
Example: borrowers-market-systemic-2025-01-15.md
Verification (Oracle)
This section documents what this skill can reliably verify vs. what requires human judgment.
What This Skill Can Verify
- Consequence chain logic – Does B follow from A? (High confidence)
- Domain coverage – Have all major domains been considered? (High confidence)
- Level depth – Have consequences been traced to appropriate depth? (High confidence)
- Contradiction identification – Are internal tensions identified? (Medium confidence)
What Requires Human Judgment
- Plausibility – Would this consequence actually occur?
- Story relevance – Which consequences matter for this narrative?
- Creative interest – Which implications are most compelling?
- Real-world analogies – Historical parallels and their applicability
Oracle Limitations
- Cannot assess narrative fit – Consequences may be logical but wrong for story
- Cannot predict creative resonance – Some chains are technically correct but boring
- Relies on domain knowledge – Specialized consequences need expert validation
Feedback Loop
This section documents how outputs persist and inform future sessions.
Session Persistence
- Output location: See
context/output-config.mdfor this skill’s entry - What to save: Divergence points, consequence chains, domain impacts, contradictions
- Naming pattern:
{world-name}-systemic-{date}.md
Cross-Session Learning
- Before starting: Check for prior worldbuilding for this setting
- If prior output exists: Build on established consequences, maintain consistency
- What feedback improves this skill:
- Consequence chains that didn’t work â Add to anti-patterns
- New domains discovered â Add to domain checklist
- Better intersection examples â Add to worked examples
Session-to-Session Flow
- First session: Define divergence, trace initial consequences, record in file
- Next session: Review prior chains, explore new domains or deeper levels
- Pattern: Diverge â Trace â Map Intersections â Document â Extend
Design Constraints
This section documents preconditions and boundaries.
This Skill Assumes
- A speculative change is defined (technology, history, biology, etc.)
- Writer wants realistic cascading consequences
- World needs depth beyond surface-level changes
This Skill Does Not Handle
- General worldbuilding – Route to: worldbuilding (broader methodology)
- Cultural texture – Route to: memetic-depth (deep cultural details)
- Long-term evolution – Route to: multi-order-evolution (generational change)
- Language development – Route to: conlang (constructed languages)
- Economic details – Route to: economic-systems (specific economic modeling)
Degradation Signals
Signs this skill is being misapplied:
- No clear divergence point (trying to build without the “what if”)
- Stopping at surface consequences despite prompts to go deeper
- All consequences are negative OR all positive (missing contradiction)
- Only one domain being explored repeatedly
Reasoning Requirements
This section documents when this skill benefits from extended thinking time.
Standard Reasoning
- Tracing single-domain consequence chains
- Identifying first-order impacts
- Documenting visibility markers
- Simple contradiction identification
Extended Reasoning (ultrathink)
Use extended thinking for:
- Multi-domain intersection mapping – [Why: tracking how consequences in 3+ domains interact]
- Deep consequence chains (4th-5th order) – [Why: requires holding many intermediate states]
- Contradiction resolution – [Why: finding how societies navigate competing pressures]
- Historical analogy synthesis – [Why: mapping real-world parallels to speculative changes]
Trigger phrases: “trace all consequences”, “full world impact”, “how does everything connect”, “comprehensive worldbuilding”
Execution Strategy
This section documents when to parallelize work or spawn subagents.
Sequential (Default)
- Divergence point must be clear before tracing consequences
- First-order impacts before second-order
- Domain impacts before intersection analysis
Parallelizable
- Multiple domain explorations can run concurrently
- Research into different historical parallels can parallelize
- Use when: Initial mapping of broad impacts across many domains
Subagent Candidates
| Task | Agent Type | When to Spawn |
|---|---|---|
| Historical research | general-purpose | When seeking real-world analogies |
| Domain deep-dive | general-purpose | When exploring specialized domain (economics, military, etc.) |
| Consistency check | Explore | When verifying against existing world files |
Context Management
This section documents token usage and optimization strategies.
Approximate Token Footprint
- Skill base: ~3k tokens (framework + levels)
- With worked example: ~4k tokens
- With domain agents: ~5k tokens
Context Optimization
- Reference worldbuilding/memetic-depth/conlang by name, not inline
- Focus on 2-3 domains per session rather than all simultaneously
- Use tracer stories to limit exploration scope
When Context Gets Tight
- Prioritize: Current consequence chain, active domain
- Defer: Full domain agent list, all 5 levels detailed
- Drop: Complete worked example, alternative focusing mechanisms
Anti-Patterns
1. Cool Tech Trap
Pattern: Stopping at first-order consequences. “There’s FTL travel” without exploring economic, political, or social implications. Why it fails: Surface-level speculation feels thin. Readers sense the world is a backdrop, not a living system. Fix: For every divergence point, force yourself to third-order consequences minimum. Ask “And then what?” repeatedly.
2. Monoconsequence Thinking
Pattern: All consequences are positive OR all are negative. Technology is either utopia-enabling or dystopia-causing. Why it fails: Real changes create mixed effects. The same innovation helps some and harms others. Fix: For every positive consequence, identify who loses. For every negative, identify who benefits. Find the contradiction.
3. Homogeneous Response
Pattern: Everyone in the world responds the same way to the change. All of society embraces or rejects the new technology. Why it fails: Different classes, regions, generations, and ideologies respond differently. Uniform response signals shallow thinking. Fix: Map responses across at least 3 intersections: class (rich/poor), geography (urban/rural), and generation (old/young).
4. Domain Isolation
Pattern: Exploring one domain deeply while ignoring how it connects to others. Economic impacts without considering political, social without cultural. Why it fails: Domains interconnect. Economic change drives political change drives social change. Isolated exploration misses the richness. Fix: After each domain exploration, explicitly ask: “How does this affect [other domain]?” Map at least 3 intersections.
5. No Visibility Markers
Pattern: Changes are described abstractly without concrete ways characters would perceive them in daily life. Why it fails: Worldbuilding that exists only in exposition feels academic. Readers need to see, hear, smell the differences. Fix: For each major consequence, define: What would a character notice? What new behaviors are visible? What language has changed?
Integration
Inbound (feeds into this skill)
| Skill | What it provides |
|---|---|
| story-sense | Diagnosis that world feels thin (State 2) |
| worldbuilding | Overall world development methodology |
| cliche-transcendence | Fresh angles on speculative changes |
Outbound (this skill enables)
| Skill | What this provides |
|---|---|
| memetic-depth | Cultural texture from traced consequences |
| economic-systems | Economic structures from consequence chains |
| governance-systems | Political systems from power shifts |
| conlang | Language evolution from cultural changes |
| settlement-design | Urban/rural patterns from geographic impacts |
Complementary
| Skill | Relationship |
|---|---|
| multi-order-evolution | Systemic-worldbuilding traces spatial ripples; multi-order traces temporal ones |
| worldbuilding | General methodology; systemic-worldbuilding is specific to speculative changes |
| belief-systems | Cultural response to changes identified by systemic-worldbuilding |