Comicory

Story to Comic Generator
See Your Story as a Comic

A story to comic generator that takes the story you already wrote and gives it back as finished comic pages — characters, panels, dialogue, and all.

Empty

Or start from an example

Script first. You approve. Then we render.

A story to comic generator is the tool writers reach for when prose alone isn't enough. You already have the story; the Comicory AI comic generator

What the Story to Comic Generator Handles

Whether your story is a 200-word vignette, a 5-chapter fan fiction, or a draft of your novel's pivotal scene, the generator parses it, casts characters, paces the panels, and renders the artwork. Your job is the writing — the visuals are automatic.

Short Stories

Single-scene stories under 500 words become 4–8 panel comics. Best for flash fiction, marketing copy, social posts, and one-shot stories.

Chapter-Length Stories

Longer stories work too — split them into chapters and use Continue Story so the same characters return across multiple comics, the way a graphic novel handles it.

Fan Fiction & Personalized Stories

Fan fiction, bedtime stories for your kid, or a story about a specific person all work. The generator picks up character cues from the text and locks them in.

Why Convert a Story to a Comic at All?

Comics carry attention better than prose on the open web. A story posted as text gets skimmed; the same story as a comic gets read panel by panel, shared, and remembered. The story-to-comic generator is the cheapest way to find out which of your stories deserve the upgrade.

Story to Comic vs. Hiring an Artist

Hiring a comic artist for a single 4-panel adaptation runs hundreds of dollars and weeks of revisions. The story to comic generator gives you a usable draft in 90 seconds for cents per page, and you can regenerate any panel that doesn't land — no scope-creep, no schedule.

Questions

About this generator.

For a single comic, aim for 100–500 words — that maps cleanly to a 4–8 panel page. Longer stories should be split into chapters; use the Continue Story flow to keep characters consistent across multiple comics in the same series.

It follows your story. The script step preserves your beats and dialogue verbatim where you've written them, and only invents visual descriptions for moments you left implicit. You can edit the script before any panel renders to course-correct.

Only if you have the rights to adapt it. Fan fiction of public-domain works (Sherlock Holmes, fairy tales, mythology) is fine; copyrighted novels require permission. Personal stories you wrote yourself are always fine.

Yes. Continue Story reuses the original character references for every new chapter, so even comics generated weeks apart keep the same cast on-model — same face, same outfit, same vibe.

Ready when you are.

Start with a paragraph.
Finish with a comic.

Sign up free, draft your first script in seconds, then upgrade to render the comic.