All ten styles
Explainer style

Mixed Media explainer videos

2.5D paper-cut collage, greyscale photo cut-outs with white scissor borders, hard drop shadows, sticky-note infographics.

Give Advibly one topic and pick this look. It writes the shot map, renders every frame in the mixed-media paper collage medium, animates it, narrates it line by line, scores it, and hands back a finished explainer.

The art direction

What makes it this look.

A style is not a filter. Every one of these dials is baked into the prompts the pipeline sends, on every single shot, which is what makes a run hold together as one film.

Watch for: Volumetric 3D shadows instead of flat offset drop shadows. Video smoothing to 24fps and killing the stop-motion feel. The subject blending into the background and losing its sloppy white scissor border. Digital particle VFX instead of paper-cut starbursts.

Best for
Education, data and mechanics topics. Explaining hidden mechanics, physics, data-heavy comparisons and historical timelines where physicalizing an abstract concept aids comprehension.
Motion cadence
On-twos 12fps with subtle element jitter and boil
Cut rhythm
Hard flash cuts and fast sliding replacements, plus environment color swaps behind a static subject.
Camera
Mostly locked-off static shots with elements moving through the frame, or very slow perfectly linear 2D pans.
Signature moves
Pop-on sticky notes, sliding paper cutouts, marker lines drawing on instantly, jagged paper-cut starbursts on impact.
On-screen text
Headline is a physical object in the frame: red marker handwriting on a torn strip of beige masking tape, a stamped-black-text yellow sticky note, or chunky 3D cardboard block letters for numbers, snapping in with no motion blur.
Narration
Fast-paced, educational, punchy, dramatic articulation on key numbers and statistics. Authoritative but accessible, urgent.
Sound
Diegetic physical sounds: tearing thick masking tape, squeaky wet marker on dry paper, heavy cardboard dropping on a wooden table, mechanical typewriter clunks.
Score
Instrumental, modern ad underscore, driving staccato strings, heavy ticking percussion, building tension, 120 BPM.
Models
gpt-image-2 for the keyframes, gemini-omni-flash for the motion.
How a run goes

You approve. It renders.

  1. 1

    Pick one of ten looks

    Every style is a full art direction, not a filter: the medium, the cut rhythm, the typography, the camera language and the sound all change together. Advibly recommends one from your brand and topic, then shows all ten so you can pick by eye.

  2. 2

    Approve the shot map

    It writes an original concept for your topic, picks a narrative arc (how it works, myth buster, problem and solution, timeline), and lays out every shot: the framing, the camera move, what moves in frame, and the narration line. Edits here are free.

  3. 3

    Render the keyframes

    One still per shot, with the style's image DNA travelling verbatim into every prompt. That is what makes eight shots read as one film. Re-roll any miss: images are cheap next to clips.

  4. 4

    Animate every shot

    Each approved keyframe becomes a clip carrying the style's motion DNA, sound effects only. Your product is re-rendered in the medium (as clay, as felt, as a pixel sprite, as a paper cut-out) rather than pasted in as a photo.

  5. 5

    Narrate it line by line

    One voiceover per shot, each pinned to its own start time. A single long read drifts off the cuts the moment one line runs long, so the template never uses one. Every line is timed to the style's speaking pace before it is spoken.

  6. 6

    Assemble the finished cut

    The clips, the narration and an instrumental score are composed in one pass, with the music automatically ducked under the voice. The result opens in the Advibly video editor if you want to fine-tune it.