Free AI Script Generator
Turn a one-line idea into a structured script. Pick a genre, write a story prompt, name your audience, and get a draft with scenes, action, and dialogue you can edit.
- Full draft — scenes, action lines, and character dialogue
- Works for film, video, stage, and short-form content
- Genre, prompt, and audience inputs shape every line
- No signup, no caps — write as many drafts as you want
What Does an AI Script Generator Actually Do?
A script generator takes a short brief and writes a structured draft for you. You give it three things — the genre, a story prompt, and who the script is for — and it returns scenes with action lines and dialogue. You skip the blank page and start from something you can react to.
The hard part of writing a script is rarely the typing. It is figuring out where a scene opens, what each character says, and how the beats connect. Seeing a full draft makes those choices concrete. You read it, keep what works, and rewrite the rest — far faster than building it from nothing.
One thing to be clear about: the tool writes the script content — the story, scenes, and lines — not the rights or a shoot-ready document. Think of it as a first draft from a fast writing partner. You bring the idea and the judgment; it handles the heavy lifting of getting words on the page.
Scenes with real structure
Each draft is broken into scenes with headings, action description, and dialogue — not one flat block of text. You get a script you can read top to bottom.
Dialogue that fits the characters
Lines are written to match the genre and tone you pick, so a thriller sounds tense and a comedy lands light instead of every character sounding the same.
Shaped by your audience
Tell the tool who the script is for — kids, teens, a corporate team — and it adjusts the language, pacing, and content to suit them.
A draft, not a final cut
The result is a starting point built for editing. Cut a scene, rewrite a line, or generate again — the goal is to get you past the hardest part fast.
Three Things Every Good Script Gets Right
A pile of dialogue is not a script. This tool is built around the three things a draft has to do before it earns a rewrite.
Open With a Hook
The first scene
The first scene sets the tone and gives the reader a reason to keep going. Every draft opens with a scene that establishes the situation quickly instead of warming up for a page.
Move the Story
Scene to scene
Scenes have to lead somewhere. The generator builds your prompt into connected beats — setup, turn, payoff — so the draft reads as a story and not a string of unrelated moments.
Sound Like People
The dialogue test
Stiff dialogue kills a script. Lines are written to fit the genre and audience you choose, so characters talk in a way that suits the world instead of reciting facts.
From Idea to Draft in Four Steps
Choose a genre
Pick the genre — drama, comedy, thriller, sci-fi, and more. This sets the tone, pacing, and the kind of dialogue the script comes back with.
Write your story prompt
Describe the story in a sentence or two. A clear prompt — who, where, what is at stake — gives you a sharper draft.
Name your target audience
Say who the script is for. The tool adjusts language, content, and pacing to fit a kids show, a teen series, or a business video.
Generate and edit
Hit Generate and read your draft in seconds. Keep the scenes that work, rewrite the rest, or run it again for a fresh take.
A Script Generator for Every Kind of Writer
Screenwriters & Filmmakers
Test a story idea fast. Generate a scene draft to see if a concept holds before committing weeks to a full screenplay.
YouTubers & Video Creators
Turn a video idea into a scripted draft with a hook and a clear flow, so filming day starts with words on the page.
Playwrights & Theater Groups
Sketch a short play or skit from a premise. Good for student productions, workshops, and quick reading drafts.
Teachers & Students
Build classroom skits or assignment scripts in any genre, written at the right level for the age group.
Marketers & Trainers
Draft explainer, ad, and training scripts that say what they need to say without a copywriter on call.
Podcasters & Hosts
Generate scripted segments, intros, and ad reads so episodes have structure instead of rambling on.
Trusted by Writers and Creators
“I use it to pressure-test ideas. If a concept reads flat as a generated scene, it would have read flat after a month of work. It saves me from dead ends.”
“My videos used to start as bullet points. Now I generate a scripted draft from the idea, tweak the lines, and the whole shoot goes faster.”
“I needed short skits for a class of ten-year-olds. Set the genre, wrote the prompt, picked the audience, and had drafts the kids could rehearse the same day.”
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the AI script generator free?
Yes. Pick a genre, write your prompt, name your audience, and generate — no signup, no credit card, no daily limit. Create as many script drafts as you want.
What kind of scripts can it write?
Story-driven scripts of most kinds — film and TV scenes, short videos, stage skits, explainer and training scripts, podcast segments. The genre and prompt you enter steer what comes back.
How does the script generator work?
You give it three inputs: a genre, a story prompt, and a target audience. The tool uses those to write a structured draft with scenes, action lines, and dialogue, usually in under twenty seconds.
Does it format the script properly?
The draft comes back structured into scenes with headings, action description, and character dialogue, so it reads like a script. You can move it into dedicated screenwriting software for strict industry formatting.
How long is a generated script?
You get a focused draft — typically one to a few scenes built around your prompt — rather than a finished feature. It is a strong starting point you expand and rewrite, not a final shooting script.
Can I edit the script or generate a new one?
Yes. Treat the result as a first draft: copy it and rewrite any scene or line you want. If the angle is not right, change your prompt or genre and generate again for a fresh take.
Will the story prompt change the result much?
A lot. A vague prompt gives a generic draft; a specific one — naming the character, the setting, and what is at stake — gives you a script much closer to what you had in mind.
Who owns the scripts I generate?
The drafts are yours to use, edit, and build on. As with any draft, give it a careful read and make it your own before you put it into production.
