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Documentation Index

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Creative Scripts support long-form scripted development for film and television workflows. Use this category when generating feature screenplay segments, television pilots, act-based drafts, character-driven scenes, or scripted creative material that needs formatting discipline and narrative structure.

Templates in This Category

Feature Screenplay
Full-length film script generation using act-based segmentation and screenplay formatting conventions.
feature_screenplay
TV Pilot Script
Episodic script generation for television pilots, act structure, serialized storytelling, and genre-specific formats.
tv_pilot_script
Series Bible
Comprehensive TV and film series development document covering world, characters, tone, pilot summary, season arc, episode format, and network pitch context.
series_bible

Feature Screenplay Setup

Recommended style profiles

Cinematic Dialogue, Action Visual Writing, TV Premium Drama, and TV Drama Writing.

Best workflow

Use act-based segmentation for long scripts rather than attempting a full feature in one generation.

Page Count by Tier

TierPage ceilingApproximate wordsTypical generation time
QuickUp to 15 pages~3,500 words~1 to 2 minutes
StandardUp to 35 pages~8,750 words~4 to 7 minutes
PremiumUp to 70 pages~17,500 words~10 to 15 minutes

Full Feature Workflow

Full features are usually 90 to 120 pages. For that length, use the Act Focus parameter across multiple generations, then assemble the segments in the Content editor.
1

Generate Act One

Establish the premise, protagonist, setting, inciting incident, and first major turn.
2

Generate Act Two A

Expand conflict, complications, relationships, obstacles, and midpoint setup.
3

Generate Act Two B

Build consequences, reversals, pressure, and the movement toward the low point.
4

Generate Act Three

Resolve the central conflict, complete character arcs, and close the story.
5

Assemble and revise

Combine acts in the Content editor, then use scene or act-level regeneration where needed.
Requesting more pages than your tier supports will clamp the output to the tier ceiling. Upgrade to a higher tier or use act-based segmentation for longer scripts.

TV Pilot Setup

Recommended style profiles

TV Premium Drama, TV Premium Comedy, TV Drama Writing, TV Comedy Writing, TV Premium Sci-Fi, TV Premium Horror, TV Premium Romance, and TV Romance Writing.

Typical length

TV pilot outputs typically range from 4,500 to 12,000 words depending on tier, genre, and act structure.
Use the Entertainment vertical for screenplay-aware formatting, pitch conventions, genre conventions, and entertainment-specific context.

Required Inputs

InputPurpose
LoglineDefines the core story premise
GenreSets tone, structure, pacing, and audience expectations
ProtagonistEstablishes the central character and point of view
Primary settingGrounds the world and production context
Act focusControls scope for feature-length screenplay generation
Tone referencesHelps align dialogue, pacing, and visual style

Tips

Provide a logline, genre, protagonist, and primary setting as minimum inputs.
Specify Act One, Act Two A, Act Two B, or Act Three to control scope per generation.
The TV pilot template is better for serialized stories, act breaks, ensemble casts, and commercial structure.
Section regeneration works well for scenes, act turns, dialogue sections, and pacing adjustments.
For stronger creative output, provide character goals, conflict, genre expectations, tone constraints, and any source material boundaries before generation.

Series Bible Setup

A series bible is a development document, not a script. Use it to establish creative parameters before writing episodes or pitching to networks.

Recommended style profile

Showrunner. Sets creative confidence, specificity of world-building, and pitch-aware voice.

Typical length

Series bibles typically range from 2,500 to 5,000 words depending on series complexity and pitch stage.
InputPurpose
Series titleAnchors the document identity
LoglineStates premise, character, and obstacle in 1-2 sentences
Genre and formatSets tone, runtime, and structural expectations
Main charactersNames, wants, and hidden needs for 2-4 leads
World and settingGrounds the story in a specific time, place, and rule set
Tone referencesComparable shows that describe feel, not plot
Season structureEpisode count and arc type
Core themesThe ideas the series explores across its run
Use the Series Bible template before writing episodes. It establishes the creative container that keeps your writer’s room, pilot, and pitch aligned.
Last modified on May 24, 2026