Turn one rough idea into a shot-by-shot video prompt.
Sample output
One rough idea becomes a clearer video prompt.
Two strangers share an umbrella at a crosswalk, neither speaks, cherry blossoms falling.
Why it works
The output is organized shot by shot, so you can see the story beat, visual change, and production logic instead of one messy block of text.
Every shot includes both what the subject does and how the camera behaves, which is what makes a video prompt feel usable.
Use each image prompt to find or generate reference frames before you move into image to video or editing workflows.
Subtle, dynamic, and dramatic modes help the system avoid the same safe push-in and eye-level framing every time.
The page focuses on visual language that stays useful even when model-specific prompt rules change.
If you write in English, Chinese, or another language, the response stays in that language so rewriting work stays low.
Who it is for
Turn a vague story beat into a clean shot structure before you open Seedance, Kling, Runway, Veo, or another generation tool.
Write fast-moving product videos, UGC concepts, and social ads without losing pacing, camera intent, or hook clarity.
Use the shot list as a planning draft when you already know the feeling you want but have not translated it into visual language.
Save reusable shot blocks, mood patterns, and image prompts so future projects start from a stronger base.
Workflow
Paste a rough idea, a half written prompt, a line from a script, or a reference style sentence. You do not need to know camera vocabulary first.
Choose cinematic, anime, ad, or realistic, then decide whether the movement should stay subtle, dynamic, or dramatic.
Receive 3 to 6 shots with scene, subject, action, camera move, mood, and an optional image prompt for every shot.
These are the questions creators usually ask before they trust a tool to turn an idea into a clear shot list.
A video prompt generator turns a rough creative idea into a structured shot list. Instead of one generic paragraph, it gives you scene, subject, action, camera move, mood, and often an image prompt for each shot.
Start with the subject, scene, action, camera move, and mood. A strong AI video prompt shows what changes from shot to shot instead of describing one static frame.
An image prompt describes one frame. A video prompt has to handle time, motion, and camera behavior. That is why this workflow writes separate shot blocks and then pairs each one with an image prompt.
Yes. You can paste a rough idea, a sentence, or a half written prompt, and the tool will turn it into a structured shot list.
Yes. That is the main use case. The tool is designed for creators who already think in beats, scenes, and sequence changes, not just one static visual.
Yes. The wording is platform neutral on purpose. You can take the generated video prompt and adapt the level of detail to whatever video model you are using.
Yes. You can try it online with no login required. Start with a rough idea, then refine the result for your preferred AI video tool.
Yes. Image prompts are useful because many creators still build video workflows shot by shot from generated or sourced images, but they can be optional.
That is fine. The tool is meant to tolerate weak input. If you only have a mood, a location, or a loose story beat, it can still draft a stronger starting point than a blank page.
Start now
Describe the idea once, get a structured shot list you can actually build from, and move into image generation or video generation with less guessing.
Free to try online, no login required.