InVideo Agent One powers fully agent-made Forge brand ads in creator posts
Creators published a fully agent-made clothing-brand ad and a separate animated short built with InVideo Agent One for scripting, storyboards, generation, and editing. The examples matter because they extend InVideo's earlier one-prompt ad claim into public creator work, though the strongest demos come from partnership content.

TL;DR
- carolletta's Forge ad post says a full cinematic ad for an existing menswear brand was made entirely with InVideo Agent One, covering prompts, shots, styling, voiceover, and edit as part of a paid Creative Residency.
- In a separate hands-on example, Anima_Labs' short-film post says Agent One handled scripting, storyboards, video generation, and editing for a small animated short.
- The strongest public demos are still partnership-backed. carolletta's main post and the follow-up link post both disclose paid ties to InVideo.
- The posts also widen the format range. While the Forge ad leans polished brand film, the animated short and awesome_visuals' Seedance clip on InVideo point to comedy animation and surreal motion work on the same platform.
The interesting part is the jump from product claim to creator output. You can watch a polished vertical brand spot in carolletta's post, a square animated short in Anima_Labs' demo, and a separate creator use awesome_visuals' clip that says Seedance 2.0 is already running on InVideo. The common thread is broader than text-to-video, because the posts describe planning and edit steps living inside the same agent workflow, and InVideo's site is where the creator thread points people to try it.
Forge brand ad
The clearest showcase is a cinematic ad for Forge, a pre-existing men's clothing brand. In carolletta's post, the creator says Agent One handled the job from the first prompt through the final cut, including shot design, outfit reveals, voiceover, and editing.
The useful detail is the scope claim. This is framed as end-to-end ad production, not just clip generation, and the dedicated Forge video post shows the finished horizontal spot as a standalone asset.
Both posts say the work came through InVideo's Creative Residency, and carolletta's link post sends viewers straight to the product site. That makes the demo more like sponsored proof-of-concept than an unscripted user review, but it is still a concrete example of the one-agent ad pitch showing up in public creator work.
Animated short pipeline
The second primary example is smaller, but more revealing about workflow. In Anima_Labs' post, the creator says Agent One helped with scriptwriting, storyboards, video generation, and editing for a comic animated short about a tiny character with oversized glasses.
That tool list matters because it breaks the process into stages:
- Script
- Storyboards
- Video generation
- Editing
The post does not claim full autonomy the way the Forge ad does. It does show Agent One being pitched as a production pipeline, not just a render button, and the finished clip has a very different tone from the brand ad.
Seedance on InVideo
A separate creator post adds one more concrete detail about the stack. In awesome_visuals' post, the creator says a surreal "Loopy grenade launcher" video was made with Seedance 2.0 on InVideo after being given account access by the company.
That post, plus 0xInk_'s repost about Agent One and Seedance2, suggests InVideo is surfacing more than one generation engine or mode across creator programs. The platform story here is not only brand-ad automation. The same creator wave is also pushing weird short-form experiments and stylized motion pieces through InVideo's tooling.
A small but useful caveat runs through all three examples: the visible showcases are closely tied to creator partnerships or platform programs. That does not weaken the videos themselves, but it does define the current evidence base.