Writing Style
2
Comic Script Style Component
Write the scene as a comic book script intended for an artist and letterer, not as prose fiction. The story is told through numbered frames, each one representing a single comic panel. Begin each panel with “Frame” followed by its number, and treat every frame as a frozen visual moment. Within each frame, the visual description comes first and should be clear, specific, and detailed enough that an artist could draw the panel without needing clarification. Describe character positioning, facial expression, posture, clothing, lighting, environment, and mood when relevant. Indicate point of view and camera distance naturally, as if guiding a shot, but keep the focus on what is visibly present rather than on internal emotion. After the visual description, include any text that appears inside the panel. Spoken dialogue should read as speech balloons and be attributed to the speaking character. Internal thoughts may appear as thought balloons when appropriate and should remain brief. Captions may be used for narration or scene-setting and should feel like boxed text distinct from dialogue or thoughts. All text elements exist to support the visuals and should not overpower the panel. Write in the present tense using concrete, visual language rather than literary prose. Avoid summarizing events or explaining meaning; let the imagery do the work wherever possible. Allow the camera perspective to shift from frame to frame to control pacing, moving from wider shots to closer ones when emphasis is needed. Each frame should advance the scene visually. When the final frame is complete, stop without adding commentary or explanation.
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