Here is the uncomfortable truth about AI video: the difference between a great clip and a wasted credit is usually the prompt, not the model. The models are good — most people just do not write the structured, specific prompts the models need. FlyAIgh’s answer is to take prompt-writing off your plate: the Director compiles a ready-to-use prompt for every shot.
Why prompt-writing is the bottleneck
Video models reward precision: a good prompt names the framing, the action, the camera move, the lighting, and where the shot lands. Skip any of those and the model guesses — and guesses drift. Beginners write "a person walking in a city" and get something generic; pros write a paragraph per shot. That paragraph-per-shot is real work, and it is the main reason a first AI film looks like a pile of unrelated clips.
What the Director compiles per shot
From one idea, the Director builds the whole brief, then compiles each shot into a structured, model-ready prompt:
- First frame — what the shot opens on (subject, framing, setting).
- Motion — what happens through the shot and how the camera moves.
- Last frame — where the shot lands, so it can hand off to the next.
- Style + references — the locked look and any character/reference images attached to that shot.
That is the same structure a working prompt engineer would write by hand — produced automatically for every shot in your board.
You describe a vibe; it writes the prompt
Your job stays in plain language. Describe a vibe or type one sentence; the Director develops the concept, locks a style, writes the script, and turns each beat into the detailed prompt that actually generates it. You get pro-level prompts without learning prompt engineering — the blank-page problem disappears.
Prompts tuned per model
Different models expect different prompt shapes — what Sora 2 wants is not what Kling or Seedance wants. Because FlyAIgh routes each shot to a fitting model, it also compiles the prompt to that model’s contract, so you do not have to memorize each engine’s quirks. Change the model on a shot and the prompt adapts.
You can still edit everything
Auto-written does not mean locked. Every compiled prompt is editable before you generate, and you can refine concept, style, or script in chat and let the shot prompts regenerate. The Director removes the tedious part; the creative control stays yours. Open the AI storyboard generator to try it.
FAQ
Do I need to know prompt engineering to use FlyAIgh?
No. The Director turns a plain-language idea or script into ready-made, model-ready prompts for every shot. You describe what you want; FlyAIgh writes the detailed prompt that actually produces it. Prompt engineering is optional, not required.
What exactly does the Director put in a shot prompt?
For each shot it compiles a structured prompt: the first frame (what the shot opens on), the motion (what happens and how the camera moves), and the last frame (where it lands) — plus the locked visual style and any character or reference images attached to that shot. That structure is what most beginners leave out.
Will the same prompt work on every model?
No, and that is the point — different models expect different prompt shapes. The Director compiles the prompt to fit the model routed to each shot, so you do not have to learn each model’s quirks. You can also override the model per shot.
Can I edit the prompts it writes?
Yes. Every compiled prompt is editable before you generate, and you can refine any earlier step (concept, style, script) in chat and let the prompts regenerate. You stay in control; the Director just removes the blank-page problem.
Build a consistent character on FlyAIgh
Identity refs + AI-derived persona + outfit variants, bound to a character ID that auto-injects into every model. Free to start, no card required.