š TOPIC: A teaser demonstrating how to generate bulk AI cartoon videos using an unnamed automation tool.
š·ļø CATEGORY: Software/App Tip
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ā ā FACT CHECK:
⢠"1 click me 100 cartoon videos ban sakte hain (100 cartoon videos can be made in 1 click)" ā ā INCORRECT While the final execution might be one click, it requires significant manual setup beforehand, including generating dozens of detailed prompts and preparing character images.
⢠"Tom and Jerry jaise cartoon 1 minute me ban sakte hain (Tom and Jerry like cartoons can be made in 1 minute)" ā ā INCORRECT Generating high-quality 3D AI video clips takes considerable computing power. A batch of 100 videos would take hours to render, not one minute. The creator is confusing the time it takes to start the process with the actual rendering time.
⢠"Aaj main 10 second me cartoon banake dikhaunga (Today I will show you how to make a cartoon in 10 seconds)" ā ā INCORRECT He only shows the process of pasting text and clicking a button in 10 seconds. The software interface clearly shows a "Processing..." and "Waiting..." status, indicating the videos are not created instantly.
⢠"Ye saare AI se bane hue hain bulk generation se (These are all made with AI using bulk generation)" ā ā CORRECT The visual evidence of the software interface, prompts, and output folders strongly supports that these are AI-generated using a bulk processing method.
š Overall Verdict: ā Misleading/False This is an "engagement bait" video. The creator exaggerates the speed and ease of the process and intentionally hides the name of the tool to force viewers to follow him for a part two.
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š COMPLETE STEP-BY-STEP GUIDE:
The reel is a teaser and intentionally omits the most important step (the name of the software). However, based on the visual evidence, here is the workflow being demonstrated:
Steps the reel showed: Step 1: The creator has a text file filled with scene-by-scene narrations and prompts (e.g., "Scene 1: Narration (STRICTLY IN ENGLISH): Tom slowly walks..."). Step 2: He copies these prompts. Step 3: He pastes the prompts into an unnamed desktop application under a section called "Prompts (one per line)". Step 4: The software has character images already loaded (Tom.jpeg, Jerry.jpeg). Step 5: He clicks "Start Generation". Step 6: The software begins processing the prompts and outputting short video clips into a grid interface.
Steps the reel SKIPPED or assumed the viewer knows: Step A: How to generate the detailed text prompts. This was likely done using a Large Language Model like ChatGPT or Claude by asking it to write a scene-by-scene script for a Tom and Jerry chase. Step B: How to acquire or create the specific software being used. The interface shows settings for "Threads" and "Browsers", which strongly indicates this is a custom web automation bot (using scripts like Selenium or Playwright) designed to automatically interact with a third-party AI video generation website in the background. Step C: The actual time it takes to render the videos, which is cut out of the video.
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š” WHAT THE REEL DIDN'T TELL YOU:
⢠The Tool's Identity: The creator deliberately hides the name of the software. It appears to be a custom-built automation script or a niche bot sold by marketers, rather than a mainstream, officially supported application. ⢠Copyright Infringement: Using trademarked characters like Tom and Jerry to generate content, especially if you plan to monetize it on YouTube (as the creator suggests), is a direct violation of copyright law and can lead to channel termination or legal action. ⢠Web Automation Risks: Because the tool uses "Browsers" to automate generation, it is likely scraping or exploiting a third-party AI service. These services frequently update their websites to block bots, meaning this custom software could break at any time. ⢠Quality and Consistency: AI video generation struggles heavily with character consistency. While the thumbnail looks good, the actual generated clips will likely have morphing issues, weird physics, and inconsistencies between scenes. ⢠Hardware/Cost Requirements: Running multiple threads and browsers for AI generation either requires a very powerful PC or relies on paid API credits from an AI provider, which can get expensive quickly.
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š USEFUL LINKS: Since the specific tool is hidden and likely a custom bot, here are legitimate alternatives for AI video generation and scripting: ⢠Search for "ChatGPT" on Google (for generating the scene-by-scene prompts) ⢠Search for "Luma Dream Machine" on Google (for high-quality AI video generation) ⢠Search for "Runway Gen-3 Alpha" on Google (for advanced text-to-video generation) ⢠Search for "Kling AI" on Google (another powerful AI video generator)
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ā° FRESHNESS CHECK: The concept of AI video generation is highly relevant and evolving rapidly as of 2026. However, the specific tactic of using custom web-automation bots to bulk-generate content often relies on exploiting loopholes in free AI services, which are constantly being patched. The video itself uses classic engagement-bait tactics that have been common for years. Live web search was not required to verify the nature of this video, as the visual evidence of the automation interface and the exaggerated claims are self-evident.