New Nano Banana 2 landing page for 2026 narrative workflows

Nano Banana 2 Storyboard Generator

Turn a short scene description into storyboard frames with consistent characters, clear props, and production-ready aspect ratios. Built for narrative ideation, pre-visualization, ad concepts, and visual storytelling.

Best fit for multi-panel scenes, character continuity, and fast iteration.

Why storyboard generation is one of the best new Nano Banana 2 use cases

This page is based on the most credible launch signals from February 26, 2026: Google positioned Nano Banana 2 around stronger instruction following, subject consistency, production-ready specs, and faster editing. 9to5Google specifically highlighted storyboarding and narrative-building as standout workflows.

Stronger subject consistency
Keep the same lead character, wardrobe, props, and lighting across multiple frames instead of rebuilding the scene every time.
Better multi-subject and object control
More reliable handling of scenes with several characters, foreground props, and narrative details makes shot planning easier.
Production-ready aspect ratios
Generate vertical storyboards, wide cinematic frames, or square concept panels, then upscale selected frames for decks and client reviews.
Clearer labels and frame text
Useful when your storyboard needs titles, on-frame notes, scene headings, or directional labels that stay readable.

Storyboard-ready references in one click

Use Nano Banana 2 to turn your concepts into storyboard frames with consistent characters and lighting.

Storyboard
Storyboard
Zero-gravity pose
Zero-gravity pose
Hero with motorcycle
Hero with motorcycle
Office scene
Office scene
Portal adventure
Portal adventure
Rainy night
Rainy night
Morning light
Morning light

What teams can build with a Nano Banana 2 storyboard page

The strongest recent use cases are less about one perfect hero image and more about sequences: ad narratives, short films, product explainers, comic beats, and creator story arcs.

Ad storyboard generation
Draft opening hooks, mid-sequence reveals, and closing CTA frames for social ads, product launches, and paid campaigns.
Pre-vis for short films
Block camera angles, lighting mood, and character movement before jumping into animation, live action, or video tools.
Product narrative frames
Map out problem-solution stories, feature reveals, tutorials, and step-by-step product demonstrations.
Comic and webtoon planning
Keep character appearance and scene tone more stable while exploring pacing, framing, and visual beats.
Explainer sequences
Create visual teaching steps, workflow diagrams, or process storytelling for docs, slides, and onboarding material.
Client concept boards
Deliver faster narrative mockups for pitches, reviews, and creative alignment before the full production budget is spent.

How to make better storyboard frames with Nano Banana 2

A simple workflow that turns the model's newest strengths into more reliable narrative sequences.

01
Define the recurring subject first
Name the main character, wardrobe, props, emotional tone, and visual style so every frame has a stable anchor.
02
Describe each frame as a shot list
Write prompts like a storyboard artist: wide shot, over-the-shoulder, close-up, dolly-in, rainy street, warm window light, title card.
03
Use references when continuity matters
Upload character, product, or environment references whenever you need the same subject to survive multiple prompts.
04
Upscale only the winning frames
Generate quickly, review your narrative sequence, then upscale the strongest frames to 2K or 4K for decks, sign-off, or production handoff.

Starter prompts for storyboard-style generation

These are structured to match the recent Nano Banana 2 strengths: instruction following, continuity, layout control, and more reliable scene detail.

Social ad sequence
Create a 4-panel storyboard for a skincare product launch. Keep the same female lead across all frames. Frame 1: tired morning bathroom scene. Frame 2: close-up applying product. Frame 3: bright natural-light mirror reveal. Frame 4: clean hero product shot with headline space and CTA area. Soft editorial lighting, modern beauty brand palette, readable frame labels.
Short film pre-vis
Generate 6 cinematic storyboard frames for a sci-fi short film. Keep the same courier character, orange jacket, and shoulder bag in every frame. Use a rainy neon city at night. Include wide establishing shot, alley chase, over-the-shoulder discovery, close-up reaction, rooftop confrontation, and final dawn silhouette. Consistent color grading, realistic lighting, storyboard-friendly framing.
Feature explainer panels
Design a 5-frame product storyboard for a smart coffee maker app. Keep the same kitchen, product shape, and user across all frames. Show setup, app connection, scheduling, brewing, and final lifestyle moment. Minimal modern composition, readable labels, clean UI details, presentation-ready visuals.
Storyboard FAQ

Questions people ask before using Nano Banana 2 for storyboards

Built around current Nano Banana 2 capabilities and the new narrative-style workflows people are testing in 2026.

Why does Nano Banana 2 work better for storyboards than older image generators?
Because the latest model is better at instruction following, subject consistency, and higher-detail scene planning. Those three things matter more for storyboard work than pure one-shot realism.
Can Nano Banana 2 keep the same character across multiple storyboard frames?
It is much better at character continuity than earlier Nano Banana releases, especially when you provide a reference image and keep wardrobe, props, and lighting clearly described.
Is this page for movie storyboards only?
No. It also fits ad concepts, creator content, product explainers, comic planning, pitch decks, and any workflow where you need a sequence instead of one isolated image.
Should I generate one big sheet or separate frames?
Usually separate frames are easier to control. Generate the sequence shot by shot, then upscale or combine the best frames into a storyboard deck.
What ratios work best for storyboard generation?
Use 16:9 for cinematic boards, 9:16 for short-form video concepts, and 1:1 when you need compact concept panels for docs or internal reviews.
What is the best companion page after this one?
The prompt library is the fastest next step. It gives you structured prompt patterns you can adapt for storyboard sequences, product stories, and multi-panel scene design.

Start building storyboard frames with Nano Banana 2

Use the generator for first-pass sequences, then refine continuity with references and stronger prompts.