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InVideo Agent One ships prompt-to-final-edit workflow in Steven Bakes a Cake

A new residency short, Steven Bakes a Cake, credits InVideo Agent One for story beats, felted animation, voiceover, sound design, and edit, and a separate creator used it for an Anti-Hero short. The posts add concrete narrative-film examples beyond last week's ad showcase; one of the pieces is a paid partnership.

5 min read
InVideo Agent One ships prompt-to-final-edit workflow in Steven Bakes a Cake
InVideo Agent One ships prompt-to-final-edit workflow in Steven Bakes a Cake

TL;DR

  • In carolletta's Steven Bakes a Cake post, InVideo Agent One gets credit for the whole chain, from prompt and story beats to felted-character animation, voiceover, sound design, and final edit.
  • Anima_Labs' Anti-Hero short describes a similar workflow, saying Agent One rewrote ideas, script, and characters, then generated a shot-by-shot storyboard, animation, and the edit.
  • The official Agent One help collection frames the product as a chat interface that "builds, edits and thinks like a filmmaker," while InVideo's pricing page says paid plans include access to a v4 agent that can make up to 30 minutes of video from one prompt.
  • carolletta's Forge ad showed the brand-ad version of this workflow a day earlier. Steven Bakes a Cake adds a softer narrative short, and Anti-Hero pushes the same tool toward darker fiction.

You can jump from carolletta's Steven Bakes a Cake link to InVideo's Agent One docs, where the product is described as a filmmaker-style chat agent with guides for context, prompt guides, and credit charging. The official pricing page says paid plans include 200-plus media models, stock access, and an agent that can generate up to 30 minutes from one prompt. A separate InVideo workflow blog post also leans hard on memory, brand context, and cast consistency, which matches the kind of multi-scene continuity these creator demos are trying to show.

Steven Bakes a Cake

The useful jump in Steven Bakes a Cake is scope. carolletta's main post does not pitch Agent One as a clip generator. It claims one agent handled the story beat planning, felted-animation look, warm voiceover, sound design, and final cut for a complete narrative short.

carolletta's follow-up post also supplies the plot in plain language: Steven the mouse runs out of nuts and berries, visits Jennifer and Jeremy, then returns home to bake and share the cake. That matters because the demo is not just style consistency across shots. It is a tiny beginning-middle-end story with recurring characters and location continuity.

Anti-Hero

The second creator example is much less polished brand marketing copy and more of a workflow breakdown. In Anima_Labs' post, the creator says Agent One reworked the original ideas, script, and characters, then produced a shot-by-shot storyboard, the animation, and the edit.

That makes Anti-Hero the more concrete process reveal in the evidence pool. The claimed steps are easy to separate:

  • idea rework
  • script rewrite
  • character development
  • shot-by-shot storyboard generation
  • animation generation
  • final edit

Together with Steven Bakes a Cake, it suggests InVideo is trying to sell Agent One as an end-to-end director-editor layer, not only as a text-to-video front end.

Brand ads and story shorts

Before Steven Bakes a Cake, carolletta's Forge ad already positioned Agent One as something that could take "full creative control" on a cinematic ad for an existing clothing brand. Steven shifts the proof point from product glamor to character storytelling.

underwoodxie96's cake clip post adds a third flavor of evidence: a smaller standalone cake-themed video with the prompt reportedly shared in comments. It is thinner than the residency posts, but it points in the same direction, short prompt-led scenes that can be reused as narrative ingredients.

The spread is the interesting bit:

  • brand ad, via Forge
  • cozy narrative short, via Steven Bakes a Cake
  • dark animated short, via Anti-Hero
  • small prompt-led vignette, via the cake clip

Agent One's official workflow

The official Agent One help collection describes the system as a chat tool that "builds, edits and thinks like a filmmaker." The article list is more revealing than the slogan:

  • Get started with Agent One
  • Masterclass: How to use AI Agents to Make Brand Films
  • How to make AI Fashion Ads Using AI Agents (Full Guide + Cost)
  • Using Context to guide your Agent
  • Prompt Guides, what they are and how to set them up
  • How credits are charged in Agent One
  • How is it different from Autopilot?

That structure lines up with the creator posts. The official UGC and AI workflows post says InVideo has been working on loading brand systems as memory, keeping cast and wardrobe consistent across variants, and compounding prior work instead of restarting each cycle. Those are exactly the promises a multi-scene short has to satisfy.

Access and limits

The cleanest availability note comes from carolletta's link post, which points straight to InVideo's product site. The official pricing page says all paid plans include:

  • access to 200-plus image, video, audio, and music models
  • access to InVideo v4 agent
  • up to 30 minutes of video from a single prompt
  • stock libraries including iStock and Storyblocks
  • on-demand credit top-ups

One caveat is explicit in the evidence itself: both Steven posts and the earlier Forge ad are disclosed paid partnerships as part of InVideo's Creative Residency, according to carolletta's main post and the Forge ad post. Anti-Hero, by Anima_Labs' short, reads more like an unsolicited creator test, which gives this batch one sponsored showcase, one brand showcase, and one separate hands-on example.

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