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📝manga-comic

manga-comic AI Prompts

20 prompts·Real examples
Street Image About

Street Image About

Create an image about "[one piece]" retold through a series of Polaroid photos pinned to a cork board. Each photo captures a key moment, with simple c...

Person Black White Image 1

Person Black White Image 1

Make a 3 panel comic in a gritty, noir art style with high-contrast black and white inks. Put the character in a humurous scene.

Photorealistic Product Studio

Photorealistic Product Studio

cut cleanly THE [OBJECT] in half across the middle, the top and bottom halves slightly separated and floating apart. Between the halves, instead of ...

Sketch Multiple Images

Sketch Multiple Images

Help me generate multiple 16:9 doodle-style images to explain the concept of "futures" to middle school students. The images should have a consistent ...

Anime Convert Input Image

Anime Convert Input Image

Convert the input photo into a black-and-white manga-style line drawing.

Prompt Provided

Prompt Provided

No prompt provided in source document

Based Uploaded Image

Based Uploaded Image

Based on the uploaded image, make a comic book strip, add text, write a compelling story. I want a superhero comic book.

Cinematic Gripping Story

Cinematic Gripping Story

Create a gripping 12-part story with 12 images, using these two characters, telling a classic film noir detective story. The story is about their sear...

Isometric Bottom Views

Isometric Bottom Views

Generate the Front, Rear, Left, Right, Top, Bottom views on white. Evenly spaced. Consistent subject. Isometric Perspective Equivalence.

Anime Woman Image

Anime Woman Image

Please create the image for page 1 of the following manga featuring the girl in the picture, "Neon." Speech bubbles should be vertical. Panels are re...

Anime Please Translate

Anime Please Translate

Please translate this manga into Japanese and turn it into an image.

Anime Japanese Gyaru

Anime Japanese Gyaru

A Japanese gyaru magazine feature page about styling school uniforms.

Person Character Uploaded

Person Character Uploaded

Using the character from the uploaded image, explain the game Silksong in a 4‑panel comic. The aspect ratio should be 9:16.

Analyze Image 2

Analyze Image 2

Analyze this image and then create a timeline of the events that led to this photograph; make a storyboard like it was a motion pictures, 9-x storyboa...

Ingredients Plate Image

Ingredients Plate Image

Show all the ingredients for this dish on a plate and label them with their names and quantities.

Multi Panels Image

Multi Panels Image

In multi panels create İL-2, IL-4, IL-12, IL-6 signaling pathways

Anime Image Japanese

Anime Image Japanese

Create an image of Japanese NFL fans cheering for the New England Patriots.

Portrait Macro Image

Portrait Macro Image

--- generation_parameters: aspect_ratio: "1:3" manga_page_generation_prompt: layout_structure: type: Full page vertical 4-panel comic strip (...

Everything About manga-comic Prompts - What Works and What Doesn't

Real talk about manga-comic prompts

I've tried a lot of manga-comic prompts over the past few months, and this collection has 20 that actually work. What I like about these is that they're not just random text - each one has been tested, and you can see the results right here.

The thing about manga-comic prompts is that small changes make a big difference. I'll grab one of these, copy it into my tool, then start tweaking. Maybe I change the lighting, swap a color, or adjust the composition. That's how I get results that match what I'm actually trying to create.

How I Actually Use These

  • I scroll through and look at the example images first. If something catches my eye, I click to see the full prompt. The images tell me way more than the titles do.
  • Once I find something interesting, I copy the prompt text. Then I paste it into whatever tool I'm using - usually Midjourney or Stable Diffusion.
  • Here's the important part: I almost never use prompts exactly as-is. I'll change the subject, adjust colors, modify the style slightly. The prompt is a starting point, not the finish line.

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Where These Prompts Actually Get Used

I've seen people use manga-comic prompts for all kinds of things:

  • Content creators on Instagram and TikTok use them to make posts that get more engagement. The key is finding prompts that match your brand's vibe.
  • Freelance designers I know use these as a base for client work. They'll grab a prompt, generate a few variations, then refine the best one in Photoshop or Figma.
  • Artists and hobbyists experiment with them just to see what happens. Sometimes the best results come from prompts you wouldn't expect to work.

What I Learned the Hard Way

  • The example images are everything. If a prompt doesn't have good examples, I usually skip it. Life's too short to waste time on prompts that don't deliver.
  • Mixing prompts works better than you'd think. I'll take the lighting from one prompt, the style from another, and the composition from a third. The results are often more interesting than any single prompt.
  • I keep a simple spreadsheet of prompts that work well for me. Just the title, what I used it for, and maybe a note about what I changed. It saves me time when I need something similar later.

Questions I Get Asked

Why are the results so different even with the same category?

Because is pretty broad, honestly. One prompt might focus on a specific style, while another emphasizes composition or mood. That's actually good - it means you have options. Find the one that matches what you're going for.

How many tries does it usually take?

Depends on what you're doing. Simple stuff? Maybe one or two tries. Complex compositions? Could be five or six iterations before I get something I like. The trick is not giving up after the first attempt.

Mistakes I Made (So You Don't Have To)

I've made plenty of mistakes with prompts. Here are the big ones:

  • Copying prompts exactly without understanding what each part does. Now I read through prompts carefully and modify them based on what I actually need.
  • Giving up too quickly. Sometimes a prompt needs a few tweaks before it works. I used to abandon prompts after one bad result, but now I give them at least three tries.
  • Ignoring the example images. If the examples look off, the prompt probably needs work. I learned to trust my eyes on this one.