
LitRPG character sheets
Status windows that feel like ones your characters would actually see. Stat bars, equipment slots, skills with ranks, relationship webs.
Characters, lore, quests, maps, and a parchment editor — all woven together. For LitRPG novelists who can't keep their notes straight.
Click pills. Tick objectives. Hover markers. The animations here are the real animations in the app.
No more tabs across three apps and a notebook. Characters know their quests. Quests know their locations. The codex knows it all — and so do you, the moment you need it.

Status windows that feel like ones your characters would actually see. Stat bars, equipment slots, skills with ranks, relationship webs.

Mention a place once and it's a page. Reference a faction and it remembers. Linked references show up in margin notes, exactly where they help.

Distraction-free writing with elegant serif type, focus mode, and gentle session goals. Whispers — never chatter — appear when you pause.

Place a marker. Link it to a quest. The map remembers. Layer toggles for regions, settlements, hazards, and story events.

Group quests by book or arc. Cycle status with a click. Tick objectives as the story moves — your outline updates itself.

Not autocomplete. Not a ghostwriter. When you pause, a whisper spots inconsistencies, surfaces forgotten threads, or asks the question a good editor would — never a sentence to paste.
Every character page in Legacia starts as one face and one line. By draft three, it's a whole life.
A worldbuilding workspace shaped by writers, not engineers. Every surface knows what kind of thinking it's meant to hold.
Status, skills, equipment, relationships, biography, and arc — folded into one page, none of it shouting.
Tight serif type and a gentle whisper when you pause — a question about your craft, a plot thread you may have dropped. Never autocomplete. Never a sentence to copy.
Mark a city, link it to a quest, attach a faction. The map becomes a memory palace your readers will eventually feel.
Houses, factions, magic systems, eras. Reference one in your prose and the codex remembers — and so does every other entry that touches it.
"The world is not found ready-made.— The first note in every Legacia project
It is written, word by word, choice by choice."
Legacia is free while in private beta. No card. No teams selling your prose to a model. Just a workspace and the next sentence.
Sign in with a magic link. We'll never spam you and never train on your prose.