Curated Prompt Vault
Ultra Wide Chase Storyboard
Generate an ultra-wide short drama scene story board, a complete single image, landscape 3:1, no collages, no multi-grid layouts, no column divisions. Theme: […
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Curated Prompt Vault
Generate an ultra-wide short drama scene story board, a complete single image, landscape 3:1, no collages, no multi-grid layouts, no column divisions. Theme: […
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Generate an ultra-wide short drama scene story board, a complete single image, landscape 3:1, no collages, no multi-grid layouts, no column divisions. Theme: [Fill in scenarios, such as street chase battles / hotel corridor ambushes / subway station escape / night market street conflicts] The visuals are not ordinary posters or traditional storyboards, but rather a story space dashboard featuring "continuous backgrounds + multiple character freeze-frames at multiple time points + one-way plot progression + hand-drawn movement line annotations + bottom timeline." The background must be a complete, continuous real scene, naturally unfolding from left to right, without cutting into multiple small shots. The plot progresses from left to right: the left is the starting point, the middle is the escalating conflict, and the right is the ending point. The same protagonist and the same pursuer/opponent appear repeatedly in different locations on the canvas, representing different points in time. The characters' costumes, hairstyles, and body types are all consistent, making it clear at a glance that they are the same person in the same scene. Each subsequent freeze-frame position must be farther to the right than the previous one; you can't keep moving left and right the next. Plot pacing suggestions: Entering the scene → Being chased → Intercepted → First encounter → Escalating conflict → Counterattacking → Breaking away to the right Adds a refined hand-drawn marking system: fine hand-drawn arrows, route markings, small circles, parentheses, center lines of movement, line of sight, and short tags for key nodes. Text should be few, light, and refined, like advanced visual notes, not like a PowerPoint infographic. Add a lightweight timeline at the bottom, for example: 00:00 Enter 00:06 Closing in 00:12 Intercept 00:18 Face-off 00:26 Upgrade 00:34 Counterattack 00:42 Detachment The overall effect should resemble a premium short drama scheduling board, action drama plot planning chart, continuous scene storyboard, or story space map. The key is to clearly see: where the characters come from, where they go, where conflicts escalate, and where the ending ends. Avoid: puzzles, multi-grid grids, comic grids, PPT style, white borders above and below, fragmented text and images, chaotic character movements, back-and-forth, discontinuous space, oversized characters, excessive text, bold annotations, and low resolution.