What makes this "free" and "no download" honestly true?
Two things worth stating plainly, because these words get abused. No download: AnimCreator is a browser app — generation, voice, subtitles, timeline editing, and export all happen in one tab, on any machine with a browser. Free: new accounts start with a free token balance; generating costs tokens per character (letter) of text you type, and editing costs nothing. The starting balance is enough to make several complete voiced videos. There's no watermark ransom and no subscription — token packs exist only for when you've used the tool enough to want more.
Step 1 — Write the script
Everything flows from one piece of writing. Switch the voice mode to Script → Motion and write what the character says, the way they'd say it:
From this single text, AnimCreator generates the spoken voice-over and choreographs the character to match it — gestures, pacing, and expressions follow the words. Tags like [pause] and <shout>…</shout> direct the performance; every script field has a toolbar that inserts them at the cursor. If the action and the words should be different things (calm narration over frantic action), use Motion + Voice mode and write them as two texts instead.
Step 2 — Generate and check the sync
Press Generate and the video plays with sound and automatic subtitles. The voice lands on the timeline as an audio clip alongside the motion clips, so if a word should hit a gesture, you slide the clip a few frames — no audio editor involved. Subtitles follow the script timing on their own, which matters because most feed video is watched on mute.
Step 3 — Fix half without re-buying the whole
The most common outcome of a first generation is "the voice is perfect but the motion missed" (or the reverse). That's a one-button fix: regenerate controls redo only the motion while keeping the recorded voice, or only the voice while keeping the motion. You edit the relevant text, rerun that half, and pay only for that half. The voice-over deep dive covers delivery tags and sync in more detail.
Step 4 — Dress the video
A voiced talking scene becomes a finished video with a few sidebar picks: a background that sets the location, an outfit that sets the character, maybe rain or sparks from the particle library. None of it requires drawing — it's all pickers, and the sidebar guide tours everything. If your video is a conversation rather than a monologue, Dialogue mode gives each character their own lines and follows the speaker with the camera.
Step 5 — Export and post
When the scene reads well muted (subtitles) and unmuted (voice), export from the studio and upload wherever the video lives — YouTube, TikTok, a lesson slide, a group chat. For vertical short-form specifically, the Shorts & TikTok guide covers format and pacing tricks that make animated clips perform.
The whole flow in five steps
- Open the studio and switch voice mode to Script → Motion.
- Write the script; add [pause] and emotion tags where delivery matters.
- Generate — animation, voice, and subtitles arrive together, in sync.
- Regenerate just the motion or just the voice if one half misses; slide clips to perfect the timing.
- Pick a background and outfit, then export and post.
You can upload your own recording instead of generating a voice — the animation syncs to it, and the voice side costs no tokens at all.