Write a Secret Mars Colony Briefing
Draft a fictional classified briefing about a secret human colony on Mars. Include population count, supply routes, and cover story.
Space exploration mysteries fuel compelling speculative fiction.
This prompt helps you create detailed fictional briefings about secret Mars colonies, making it perfect for science fiction writers, worldbuilders, game designers, and anyone crafting speculative fiction narratives. If you're working on a sci-fi novel, tabletop RPG campaign, or alternate history project that requires plausible conspiracy elements, this prompt generates the kind of bureaucratic detail that makes fictional scenarios feel authentic and immersive. The prompt works by asking Claude to invent specific elements like population numbers, logistical supply chains, and official cover stories that a secret space program might use to hide a Mars colony from public knowledge.
To use this prompt effectively, you'll need to fill in contextual details that Claude can build upon. For example, if you want a briefing dated in 2045, specify that timeframe and mention whether your fictional colony was established recently or decades ago. You might add details about which space agency or private company supposedly runs the operation, whether you want the cover story to involve asteroid mining or climate research, or how many people you imagine living there. These specific parameters help Claude generate more tailored and believable content for your particular story world.
When you run this prompt, expect a formatted briefing document that reads like actual classified material. Claude typically includes a fabricated header with security classifications, a population breakdown, detailed descriptions of supply routes (like which cargo missions deliver resources), and an elaborated cover story explaining the colony's official public purpose. The output usually runs several paragraphs and maintains a formal, bureaucratic tone throughout.
For better results, ask Claude to maintain internal consistency across the briefing. If you mention specific technology or earlier establishment dates in your follow-up, Claude can expand on those details coherently. You'll get richer, more interconnected worldbuilding if you refine the briefing across multiple exchanges rather than expecting everything in one response.