1. Set the narrative direction
Capture the premise, characters, and tone in a way the system can actually use. Good comics start with clear story intent.
OS Comics turns a rough idea into a structured comic project, generates art-ready pages, and gives you the tools to iterate fast without losing control of story, style, or pacing.
Sketch the story, define characters, and guide the AI toward the visual tone you want. Then shape the pages instead of fighting raw prompts.
Visible progress, page control, and reusable prompts help you keep the best ideas moving instead of getting stuck in production friction.
Everything is organized around the creative flow: define the story, generate the pages, then polish what matters most.
Capture the premise, characters, and tone in a way the system can actually use. Good comics start with clear story intent.
Produce comic pages with style context and page structure already in place, so the output is more usable on the first pass.
Edit page-by-page, revisit artwork, export the result, and keep iterating until the comic feels complete.
The page prioritizes clarity, speed, visual polish, and a focused path to action.
The design leans editorial: strong typography, dark hero contrast, glassy cards, layered motion, and a clean conversion path that works on mobile.
Use specific outcomes, not vague praise. A landing page converts when the reader can picture themselves succeeding.
I went from idea fragments to a structured comic concept in a single session. The biggest win was staying inside one workflow instead of bouncing between tools.
The page flow feels like a real product, not a prompt toy. It makes it easier to keep the story coherent while still moving fast.
The strongest part is how the interface keeps the next best action obvious. That matters more than flashy effects.
Start with the smallest useful step: set the premise, generate the first pages, and keep the work moving inside one polished workspace.