How to Create a Series of Cultural Videos Using ChatGPT ,PixVerse , andNabat?
This method is ideal for creating a cultural video series based on a single idea. Start by writing down the idea and requesting prompts fromChatGPT, then move to PixVerse to generate scenes, and next use Nabrati to convert the text to speech by selecting a character and accent. Finally, combine the scenes with the audio in an editing program like CapCut. PixVerse supports generating videos from text or images, allows you to control the size and duration, and offers ready-made templates and a MultiShot featurefor multiple scenes. Nabrati lets you convert text to speech by selecting the voice, accent, and emotions, then download the resulting file.
Overview
If you want a cultural series on history, science, stories, or general information, this method gives you a clear workflow: the idea comes fromChatGPT, the visuals fromPixVerse, and the audio from Nabrati, then everything is combined in an editing program. The advantage is that it breaks the work down into easy steps, so you don’t need a single tool to do everything—instead, you use each tool where it excels.
The two websites
Website to download the app and generate videos, 100-credit gift code: https://share.pix.video/referral/F209X9VS
Link to the live video website: https://app.pixverse.ai/
Link to the audio generator: https://www.nabarati.ai/ar
Step 1: Enter the idea and prompts into ChatGPT
First,type the episode idea intoChatGPT, then ask it:“
” the episode title,
break it down into short scenes,
the voiceover script,
and a visual prompt for each scene.
This step is very important, because the quality of the video in PixVerse improves the clearer the prompt is from the start. Therefore, it’s best for each scene to be short and specific, including a description of the location, movement, style, and camera angle.
Step 2: Generate the video on PixVerse
After preparing the prompts, go to PixVerse and use Text/Image to Video. The site explains that it supports entering prompts directly or uploading an image, then generating high-quality video. It also offers MultiShot to automatically generate multiple shots,Character Reference to maintain character consistency, andMulti-Frame Control to manage the start and end of motion. It also offers ready-made templates, a Lip Sync & Audio feature, andvideo editing tools within the platform.
In practice:
Paste the prompt,
select the duration,
set the dimensions,
then click Generate.
If the series is intended for YouTube, the horizontal aspect ratio is suitable; if it’s for Reels and Shorts, the vertical aspect ratio is better.
What about free credits on PixVerse?
PixVerse offers free benefits to users, and the official website focuses on an open experience for creators with direct pathways to experimentation, but it does not display a clear, fixed number for daily credits on the homepage in the open lines I reviewed. Therefore, the precise wording is:
PixVerse provides a renewable free credit balance for trial use within the platform, and it can be used to generate short videos, but the specific daily amount may vary depending on the account or current offers within the app. This detail always needs to be checked within the account itself at the time of use.
Step 3: Generate the audio on Nabarati
After finishing the scenes, go to Nabarati. There, enter the text you want to convert to audio, then select:
the voice,
accent,
and emotions.
The official website explains that Nabrati offers text-to-speech conversion, with options for voice, accent, and emotion. It mentions the availability of hundreds of voices and accents and clearly outlines the steps: enter text, choose a voice, then listen and download. It also highlights features such as advanced customization of tone, speed, and pauses, and support for over 1,000 different accents and speech rates.
This makes it very suitable for cultural series videos, as you can give each episode a specific tone: calm, enthusiastic, formal, or narrative.
Step 4: Assemble the clips in an editing program
After downloading the scenes from PixVerse and the audio from Nabat, import them into a video editing program like CapCut. Here, you can arrange the clips, adjust the audio timing, add subtle transitions or simple text if you like, and then export the final episode.
This way, you’ve built a complete episode in three clear stages:
ChatGPT for the idea and prompt,
PixVerse for the video,
Nabarti for the audio,
and finally editing for the final assembly.
Why is this integration suitable for cultural series?
Because a cultural series usually needs:
a clear idea,
multiple short scenes,
clear voice-over,
and a fast production pace.
PixVerse is suitable for multiple visual scenes, especially with MultiShot, templates, andText toVideo; Nabat is suitable for Arabic voiceovers with dialects and emotions; andChatGPT is suitable for writing ideas and prompts. Therefore, this integration is very practical for creating recurring episodes of the same style.
Conclusion
If you want to build a series of educational videos in a practical and fast way, the right workflow is:
Write the concept and prompts onChatGPT,
generate the scene on PixVerse by selecting the duration and dimensions,
convert the text to speech on Nabatry by selecting the character, voice, and accent,
then assemble everything in an editing program like CapCut.
This method is ideal for content creators who want to produce recurring episodes with good quality and minimal complexity, while leveraging visual and audio generation in their proper places.
