Comic strip draftPlan comic strips from a prompt
Describe the characters, setup, punch line, and number of panels, then shape the result into a short strip for social posts or community updates.
Try this workflowCreate a 4-panel comic strip about two original anime characters finding a tiny helper robot in a rainy neon alley, with short dialogue beats and a clear ending.
AI comic generator preview
Panel examples make the story structure easier to picture before you start generating.
Comic strip draftPrompt guided
Style control
Ready to refine
AI comic generator
Turn a story idea into a panel-by-panel comic plan with character notes, scene direction, dialogue beats, and layout prompts.
Story beat
Turn a premise into a readable panel sequence
Panel plan
Shape framing, pacing, and visual rhythm
Dialogue plan
Leave room for bubbles, captions, and later edits
Popular workflows
A comic workflow is not just a single image. A useful page or strip needs a beginning, a visual rhythm, and dialogue that fits the panels. Start by describing the story beat, choose a panel layout, then move from rough draft to shareable comic concept.
Comic strip draftDescribe the characters, setup, punch line, and number of panels, then shape the result into a short strip for social posts or community updates.
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Dialogue passUse a longer prompt to plan page beats, close-ups, action panels, and dialogue before refining the strongest version.
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Panel layoutTurn episode notes into repeatable panel directions, visual references, and dialogue placeholders for a lightweight comic workflow.
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Comic strip draftWrite short lines for each character first, then keep those notes ready for a later speech bubble pass.
Try this workflowWorkflow
Build the story before the artwork. A strong comic brief names the cast, panel count, visual rhythm, and where dialogue should fit.
Give the tool a short premise, character roles, panel count, tone, and ending. A clear beat keeps the strip readable.
Create a page or strip direction with panel framing, visual style, and dialogue placeholders instead of one isolated image.
Refine the dialogue, mark where bubbles should sit, and choose whether the idea needs a manga page, comic strip, or separate text-placement pass.
Workflow guide
Prompt-led comic creation
Start here for story-to-panel creation, comic book drafts, and web comic ideas.
Short 3-4 panel stories
Choose this when the idea needs a quick setup, turn, and final beat.
Page-style and longer-form concepts
Draft page beats, close-ups, and action moments, then edit layout and text before publishing.
Adding and editing dialogue after the art exists
Choose the bubble workflow when the art exists and you need clean text placement.
FAQ
An AI comic generator turns a written story idea into comic panel directions, visual drafts, and dialogue placeholders. It is useful when you need a comic strip, web comic concept, or comic book page draft before final editing.
Yes. For a comic strip, write the number of panels, the setup, the final beat, and short dialogue notes. A 3-4 panel structure is usually easier to read than a crowded page.
A normal image generator focuses on one scene. A comic generator needs story order, panel rhythm, character consistency, and space for dialogue, so the prompt should describe the sequence instead of only the final image.
You can draft comic book page concepts with panels, close-ups, action beats, and dialogue notes. Final production may still need editing for text, layout, continuity, and print formatting.
AI image models often struggle with clean lettering. For readable comics, plan the dialogue in the prompt, then add or edit final text after the panel art is stable.
Include the main characters, setting, panel count, tone, conflict, ending beat, visual style, and one short line of dialogue per panel. Keep the scene focused so the page stays readable.
Adding bubbles after the panel art is easier to control. You can keep faces clear, adjust reading order, and fix spelling without regenerating the whole comic.
Move into manga, character, or speech bubble pages when the story needs a different visual format.
Start with one story beat and a small cast. Keep the panel count tight until the comic reads clearly.