Comments

Literary publishing management sim. Discover hidden authors and navigate the literary culture of an era — scout talent, balance art vs commerce, watch your books reshape what people read.
You run a small literary press. Manuscripts arrive every week from agents, slush, and the long-suffering writers' workshop circuit; one in a hundred is worth reading twice, and one in a thousand might define the next era. The decisions you make at your desk — whose advance to raise, whose marketing budget to cut, which midlist author to keep when the accountants are circling — accumulate into a catalog that outlives every season, and a reputation that travels ahead of the next book.
The Imprint is a deep simulation of literary publishing across five eras, from the typesetting age to the streaming-and-BookTok present. Reader tastes drift; rival houses sign your favourite authors away; backlist sales compound across decades; and every book's performance is traceable, on demand, through a Democracy-4-style causal graph that ends the genre's slot-machine reputation for good.
Features
Discover hidden authors — Read manuscripts, weigh agent demands, and sign talent before rival houses notice them.
Balance art versus commerce — Prestige and revenue pull in different directions; neither is the right answer for every season.
Trace every outcome — The causal graph surfaces every arrow of influence behind a book's reception; opacity is a design failure here, not a feature.
Literary eras — Each era ships its own reader appetites, market structures, and rival-house behaviour, from gothic-revival print culture through the BookTok platform age.
Build a living backlist — Books accumulate readers, reviews, and rights deals long after release; your catalog funds your next gamble.
Dynastic succession — Authors age, retire, and die; their reputations outlive them, and the imprint you build outlives its founder.
Sandbox mode plus difficulty tiers — Configure noise, rival aggression, and economic pressure to your appetite; deterministic seeds underneath, so every save can be replayed identically.
