Plixel

Lock continuity once—reuse it everywhere.

AI video breaks the moment your project grows: characters drift, locations change, and style becomes inconsistent from shot to shot. The Project Bible is where you define what’s “true” for your show or film—then Plixel uses it every time you generate.

The problem: every new shot forgets your show

Most AI tools treat each generation like a brand-new request. That’s fine for one-off clips. But for a series, a pilot, or a feature film, it becomes expensive and frustrating:

Characters

Characters subtly change face, wardrobe, age, or proportions

Style

Your “style” becomes a moving target

Locations

Locations drift between shots (lighting, layout, props, vibe)

Credits

You waste credits and time re-rolling to get back to something consistent

What it is

The Project Bible is your source of truth for the project. It’s where you define the world and rules once, so your shots and scenes stay aligned as you iterate.

 

Think of it as the layer that sits above prompting: the place where you stop re-explaining the same context in every shot.

Characters

Profiles, visual rules, wardrobe, personality, voice/tone notes, and “must not change” constraints.

Locations

Reusable sets with lighting, time-of-day defaults, mood, and persistent details that should show up again and again.

Style rules

Your visual direction in plain terms: camera language, pacing, framing preferences, and what “on brand” looks like for this project.

Tone & dialogue constraints

How people speak, what kinds of jokes are allowed, what themes to avoid, and what “feels right” for the project.

Popular questions

Isn’t this just prompts?

No. Prompts describe what you want right now. The Project Bible stores what must stay true across the whole project—and applies it consistently.

It reduces accidental randomness, not creativity. You can still explore variations—just without losing your baseline identity.

Probably not. It’s built for anything with continuity: pilots, series, shorts, and feature films.