StoryComic AI

Create Your First Webtoon Episode With AI

Start with a small idea, a main character, and a vertical story rhythm that feels right for scrolling readers.

Updated June 12, 2026

Quick answer

StoryComic helps beginner webtoon creators turn a character and a simple premise into a first episode. The workflow focuses on recurring characters, readable pacing, and a format that can grow into later episodes.

Best for

  • Beginner webtoon creators testing a story idea.
  • Writers with a character concept but no drawing skills.
  • Creators who want a first episode before committing to a long series.
  • People who care about continuity more than full production polish.

What you can create

  • A first episode shaped for vertical reading.
  • A repeatable starting point for later episodes.
  • A readable intro with setup, reveal, and cliffhanger potential.
  • A shareable link for feedback before bigger production work.

Example prompts

A new student arrives at a magic school and realizes their powers work backwards.
A teenager opens the closet door and finds a room that should not exist.
A monster hunter's new roommate is secretly the species they hunt.
A shy character discovers their emotions change the weather.
A mysterious letter arrives with a warning about tomorrow.

Workflow

01

Create or upload your character

02

Choose an episode idea

03

Preview the script

04

Generate comic pages

05

Share or export the episode

FAQ

Start with a small idea, a main character, and a vertical story rhythm that feels right for scrolling readers.

What makes a good first webtoon episode?

A clear protagonist, a readable situation, and a reason to continue are usually more important than explaining the entire world.

Do I need a full season outline first?

No. A short premise and a character with a clear problem are enough to start a strong first episode.

Can this become episode 1 of a longer series?

Yes. The workflow is designed to support recurring characters and later episode creation.

Does vertical format matter that much?

Yes. Pacing, reveals, and spacing feel different in scroll-based reading than in page-based comic layouts.

Should I open with action or mystery?

Either can work, as long as the opening gives readers a reason to keep scrolling to the next beat.

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