AI-powered cartoon storytelling that turns Reddit's wildest posts into viral animated shorts. Hook the viewer in 3 seconds. Leave them hanging for Part 2.
"POV: You discover your roommate has been living a secret double life..."
Reveal clues. Stack tension. Every 2–3 seconds a new visual beat lands.
Something shocking happens. The moment the viewer didn't see coming.
"Part 2 tomorrow." Drives follows. Fuels binge-watching.
"My roommate disappeared for 3 days..."
"My boss fired me, then begged me to come back."
"The abandoned house at the end of my street..."
"My landlord stole my deposit, so I..."
"My girlfriend tested me and ruined our relationship."
60-second hooks that pull viewers in and make them follow for Part 2. Post 60x daily across TikTok, YouTube Shorts, Instagram Reels, and Facebook.
3–10 minute compilations that convert short-form viewers into subscribers. This is where the real money lives — long-form CPMs are 20–50x higher than Shorts.
Post different edits of the same story across multiple accounts simultaneously. The algorithm decides which format wins — let it test them all.
The biggest factor isn't the number of accounts — it's whether your first few hundred videos achieve strong watch time and completion rates. One channel with highly engaging stories usually outperforms ten channels posting average content.
"The internet has infinite stories.
Someone wrote them. Someone read them.
Now they're animated."
— StoryFrame, built for the scroll generation