Projects
One project per piece of writing, with a guided setup for its content type.
A project is one piece of writing. Each project has a content type that shapes the coaching around it, and you can assign a voice so every stage works toward the same sound.
Content types
When you create a project you pick a content type. Each one tailors the setup interview and the coaching to the kind of writing you are doing:
- Blog article — shorter, audience-led non-fiction.
- Short fiction — a self-contained story.
- Long-form nonfiction — essays, reports, and book-length work.
- D&D / TTRPG — adventures, settings, and campaign material.
- Screenplay — scripts and scene work.
The setup interview
After you name the project and choose a content type, a coach interviews you — chat style — to gather the context that makes the later stages meaningful: your topic, audience, purpose, and any constraints. The questions are tailored to the content type you picked.
The project is created when the interview is done and you confirm. You can re-run the setup interview later from the project to update its context as the work takes shape.
Importing existing writing
Already have a draft? When you create a project, choose to import instead of starting blank. Upload a .md, .txt, .docx, or .pdf and Oghmere analyzes it to pre-fill the project — its structure and setup context — so you can review and confirm rather than starting from scratch. There is a size limit per import; very large manuscripts may need to be brought in a part at a time.
Managing projects
Settings → Projects lists your projects by state. Archiving hides a project from navigation without deleting anything — unarchive it anytime to bring it back. Deleting a project moves it to a recoverable state for 30 days, during which you can restore it from the same page; after that it is removed permanently.
What it costs
Each turn of the setup interview spends a credit. Credits are reserved up front and any you do not use are returned.