The hardest part of making a video isn't filming it — it's staring at a blank document trying to figure out how to start. Nohaya's Script Writer exists specifically to break that bottleneck.
How it works
You give it a topic, a tone, a target length, and a structural template (hook-first, storytelling, listicle, and a few others), and it returns a complete script broken into a hook, body, and a closing call-to-action. It's not meant to be your final word-for-word script — it's meant to get you past the part where nothing exists yet.
Why structure matters more than wording
Most creators who struggle with scripting don't actually struggle with sentences — they struggle with shape. A script with no hook loses viewers in the first three seconds; a script with no clear ending fizzles out instead of asking for the follow, the comment, or the click. Script Writer forces every draft through that shape automatically, which is often the actual unlock, even if you rewrite half the sentences afterward.
A practical workflow
- Generate 2-3 drafts of the same topic with different templates (try "hook-first" and "storytelling" back to back) and see which structure fits the topic better.
- Treat the AI draft as a scaffold, not a script. Swap in your own phrasing, examples, and voice — the goal is a shape to react to, not a final product to read verbatim.
- Feed the finished script straight into TTS Studio for a voiceover, or into Create Shorts if you want several script variants on the same topic at once.
Where this fits in a real content pipeline
Script Writer is the first step in Nohaya's Creator Tools chain: script → voiceover → captions → short-form video. If you're producing one piece of content at a time, use Script Writer directly. If you want to batch-produce multiple angles on one topic in a single pass, Create Shorts & Reels runs this same scripting step automatically, multiple times, alongside voiceover and captions.