Formats
Fountain · PDF · Markdown
Export-ready text compatible with common script editors and collaboration tools
Free tool
Start with a logline, outline, or single beat and create industry-structured scenes you can edit, regenerate, and export. Designed for screenwriters, indie filmmakers, and writing instructors who need fast, editable drafts and clean exports.
Formats
Fountain · PDF · Markdown
Export-ready text compatible with common script editors and collaboration tools
Scene control
Per-scene produce, edit, regenerate
Build drafts without rebuilding the whole script
Tone & genre
Templates for key genres
Prompts tuned for comedy, drama, horror, action, and episodic pacing
At a glance
This tool addresses slow first-draft momentum and time spent reformatting. Use it to move from a logline to a three-act outline, expand a beat into a full scene, preserve character voice, or adapt scenes between feature and TV formats. Output is focused on editable, exportable scene drafts rather than finished deliverables.
What it does
Practical drafting features designed for screenwriting workflow, not just showy headlines.
Convert a single-sentence logline into a labeled three-act outline with 8–12 beats and one-sentence goals per beat — a planning backbone for scene expansion.
Expand individual beats into 1–3 page scene drafts, then edit or regenerate that single scene without rebuilding the entire script.
Produce Fountain/plain-text for script editors, PDF for readbacks, and Markdown or copy-ready text for collaborative docs.
Start from templates tuned for comedy, drama, horror, action, or episodic TV so the first draft hits the right pace and voice.
Keep character notes and scene context across multiple passes so voice and plot consistency survive rewrites.
Use these starters
Copy these prompts to get reliable, structured output. Replace bracketed sections with your material.
Where your draft goes next
The generator produces plain-text and Fountain-formatted scenes you can import into common screenwriting tools. Use PDF for readbacks and shareable drafts; use Markdown or copy-ready text for collaborative editing in Google Docs or a writing group.
Team-ready
Manage feedback and version control by exporting per-scene drafts, index-card summaries, or full-outline PDFs. Share tightened scenes for table reads and use index-card exports for planning sessions.
A free starter experience is available to generate outlines and scene drafts; advanced features such as extended generation length, higher concurrency, or additional export options may be part of paid plans. Check /pricing for current plan details and limits.
You retain ownership of the original creative content you provide and produce with the generator. For legal protection and submissions, follow standard industry practices: register your scripts with your local copyright office or a writer’s guild as appropriate.
Yes. The generator provides Fountain/plain-text output and PDF exports designed to be import-friendly. For Final Draft or Celtx, import the plain-text or convert Fountain using your editor’s import routines. For collaborative editing, copy to Google Docs or export Markdown.
Create and save concise character profiles (name, voice notes, key phrases) and include them in your rewrite prompts. Use the iterative rewrite prompts to update tone while preserving prior scene context so voice remains consistent across passes.
Output follows screenplay-structured conventions and can be exported to Fountain/plain-text to ease import into industry tools. Always verify final layout and pagination in your preferred script editor before production use.
Yes. Use adaptation prompts to change pacing, add a cold open or act breaks, and reshape scenes for feature-to-TV conversions. Start with scene-level adjustments and then run outline-to-episode prompts to redistribute beats across acts.
Treat sensitive material carefully. The generator stores drafts according to platform policies—consult Texta’s privacy terms for details. For highly sensitive scripts, export drafts immediately and manage copies in your chosen secure storage.
Export scene drafts to PDF or copy text to Google Docs for inline comments. Use index-card summaries for production notes and export scenes individually to distribute targeted feedback to editors or producers.
Clear loglines, concise beat outlines, character descriptions, and example lines of dialogue give the generator strong direction. The more specific the instruction (tone, camera notes, pacing), the more useful the first draft will be.
Use the generator for development drafts and planning. Finalize formatting, production paperwork, and legal clearances through your production or legal team before submission to festivals, studios, or registries.