Kliptory Kliptory Docs

Kliptory Product Overview

This page documents what Kliptory produces, how you start a render, and what files you get back. For marketing examples and channel strategy, see the homepage; for topic-only creation see Text to Video; for pre-written scripts see Script to Video.

Supported output formats

Each format changes how footage is sourced and how scenes are paced.

Format Best for Visual style
Documentary (B-Roll) Video essays, explainers, atmospheric narration Cinematic stock + generated stills under voiceover
Documentary (A-Roll) News, history, interviews, evidence-led stories Web-sourced interviews, news clips, archival footage
Top 10 / Listicle Ranked lists, evergreen discovery content Structured segments with cutaways per list item
Illustration / Slideshow Story-driven or stylized faceless channels Generated or stock imagery with motion treatment

Runtime and aspect ratio

  • Duration: approximately 5–40 minutes per render, depending on script length and format.
  • Primary aspect ratio: 16:9 landscape for standard YouTube uploads.
  • Voiceover uploads: custom audio supported up to the configured voiceover limit (see site settings).
  • Credits: billed by generated runtime based on included plan allowances (see pricing for credits per hour/minute).

Two ways to start a project

Prompt mode

Enter a topic or short brief. Kliptory researches, drafts a retention-focused script, and runs the full pipeline. Use when you have an idea but not a finished narration.

Text to Video guide →

Script mode

Paste an existing script or article. Kliptory splits scenes, synthesizes or accepts voiceover, and pairs visuals to your words. Use when the writing is already done.

Script to Video guide →

Pipeline stages

Every render moves through the same production stages:

  1. Script — generated from a prompt or parsed from pasted text with scene boundaries.
  2. Voiceover — ElevenLabs TTS or uploaded narration, chunked for long runtime.
  3. Asset sourcing — per-scene YouTube, stock, or generated visuals.
  4. Motion graphics — maps, timelines, counters, and typography when script context triggers them.
  5. Audio mix — voiceover, music bed, and SFX balanced for documentary pacing.
  6. Assembly — captions burned in, transitions applied, MP4 exported.

Deliverables

  • Finished MP4 ready for YouTube upload
  • SRT / burned-in captions
  • Separate audio and video stems (where export is enabled)
  • FCP 7 XML timeline + media bundle for Premiere, Resolve, or Final Cut
Open Create Video

Reference renders

Output examples by format — use these to judge pacing and visual mix before starting your own project.

A-roll format — interview and archival driven

B-roll format — narration over cinematic footage

Top 10 / listicle pacing

Essay-style narration and cut rhythm