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Is it hard to learn?
Absolutely not! As you can see from the graphic below, the main interface was designed to look very much like the Windows word processor you are probably already using. If you can type in that, you'll find it even easier to type in Power Writer.

Don't confuse ease-of-use with stripped-down, though. It's called Power Writer for a reason, giving you all the pertinent word processing features you could ever need. Sure, it doesn't do mail merges or spread sheets or fancy tables... but it also won't ever change your font or layout simply because you backspaced one character too many! See How does it differ from Microsoft® Word? for more details.
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Power Writer's Outline
View, although probably less familiar, is also drop-dead
simple to use. Normally hidden out of sight, the outline
view can be slid out simply by clicking on the drag bar on the
far left edge of the screen.
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Like the Outline View, Power Writer's Story Tools remain conveniently out of sight until you want them. Then just click on the bottom drag bar and it slides upwards, ready for action. With six easily accessible arenas (General Story, Acts, Chapters, etc.), it is a snap to keep all your development data in easy reach.

Tell me more!
Is it hard to learn?
It doesn't have a lot of weird terminology or promise to "reinvent story telling," does it?
I'm pretty set in my ways; am I going to have to learn to work the way the guys who designed it do?
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Download Demo | ![]() |
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