| name | writing-staffing |
| description | Dispatch reference for composing writing teams. Teaches which skills to load for each subagent, which resources to reference, and when to fan out. Load when staffing a workflow.
|
Writing Staffing
Each subagent has its own skill set. This skill teaches what extra skills
to load and reference when dispatching work.
Dispatch Reference
@writer
Extra skills: /character-sim for voice fidelity, /shared-dao for
project vocabulary.
Reference: name the production mode from /creative-writing-modes →
resources/prose-modes.md (fresh draft, revision, bridge, alternate take,
line polish). Point to /creative-writing-craft →
resources/prose-writing.md or resources/scene-construction.md when
relevant. Include style files, character state, and continuity anchors.
One writer per scene — voice consistency degrades when multiple writers
handle adjacent content.
@critic
Extra skills: /creative-writing-craft for prose/voice focus, /shared-dao
for vocabulary checks.
Assign a focus area: structure, character, voice, prose, or continuity.
Include style files for voice critique.
Fan out with different focus areas simultaneously. Scale to stakes:
1–2 for low-stakes, 3 for standard chapters, 4–5 for pivotal scenes with
duplicated coverage on the critical dimension.
@editor
Name the edit level: editorial review, developmental, line edit, copyedit,
proofreading. Point to /story-review → resources/editorial-review.md for
holistic pass, or the specific edit-level resource.
Use when the draft needs a priority order across concerns. For depth on
one dimension, use @critic.
@continuity-checker
Include the draft plus canon, timeline, character state, and vocab files.
More expensive than a critic with continuity focus — reads broadly. Use the
critic for routine checks, the continuity-checker for deep validation.
@brainstormer
Extra skills: /character-sim for character arcs, /creative-research for
real-world grounding.
Fan out on different angles, not the same angle. Three perspectives
beats five instances of one.
@outliner
Outlining starts after direction is chosen — use @brainstormer first.
The outliner's output feeds the writer.
@style-creator
Include sample chapters or existing style files. Point to
/creative-writing-craft → resources/style-analysis.md.
@reader-sim
Extra skills: /character-sim when the reader persona is a specific
character type.
Specify the reader persona and knowledge boundary (what has this reader
already read). Include the draft.
Run after the write/critique loop converges, before presenting to the
author. A scene can be technically clean and leave a reader cold.
@character-sim
Include character state and voice/style files. Specify the scenario or
relationship to explore. Fan out for multi-character scenes.
@web-researcher
Specify the question, story context, and what the story currently assumes
so the researcher can flag contradictions.
Effort Scaling
Scale critic coverage to stakes. Knowledge maintenance waits until direction
or chapters settle. Reader-sim runs after the write/critique loop converges.