A Conlanging Perspective
The Language Creator can generate a complete language in a single click — phonology, morphology, syntax, lexicon, grammar and example texts. The result is not a sketch or a fragment, but a coherent system.
What it does not generate are radically alien or unconstrained languages. The Language Creator is designed to produce humanly plausible grammars. Its parameters are grounded in typology, and its defaults favour patterns that are well attested across the world’s languages. Implausible combinations are avoided deliberately, not accidentally.
Its parameters are grounded in typology, and its defaults favour patterns that are well attested across the world’s languages. For example, in human languages /b/ can exist without /p/, and /k/ often exists without /ɡ/. The reverse patterns are extremely rare (except in systems without a voicing contrast at all). The LC will therefore happily generate a stop inventory such as /b d t k/, but it will never produce /p d t ɡ/. Such asymmetries are treated as meaningful typological facts rather than cosmetic irregularities.
If your goal is to design genuinely non-human systems, the architecture could in principle be extended with additional parameters that relax or invert human constraints. That is not the aim of this project, but the code is open source. The boundaries are explicit, not immutable.
Within its intended scope, the Language Creator is useful both for rapid exploration and for serious design. You can regenerate repeatedly to explore different structural directions, or take a generated language as a finished first version and refine it manually. The internal representation can be edited, and grammars and dictionaries can be exported in editable formats.
The system does not model diachronic descent. Re-running the generator with slightly altered parameters produces alternative grammars occupying nearby positions in typological space, not members of a historical language family.
In short: the Language Creator produces complete, typologically grounded human languages. Whether you treat the result as a finished product or as the starting point for further work is up to you.