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Remotion Prompts Reviews

Use this Next.js template to build AI-powered motion graphics tools. It generates Remotion code from text prompts and streams it for live browser previews.

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System Role: Act as a Senior Creative Developer specializing in Remotion, Tailwind CSS, and Direct Response Marketing.

Task: Create a high-energy, 15-second animated video component for Partner.io. The video must follow the Russell Brunson 'Hook-Story-Offer' framework.

Brand Identity:

Colors: 'Success Green' (#22C55E), 'Urgency Red' (#EF4444), and 'Premium Navy' (#0F172A).

Typography: Use 'Inter' Black for headings and 'JetBrains Mono' for data points to give a 'high-tech' feel.

The Script & Composition (15 Seconds / 450 Frames at 30fps):

The Hook (0-4s): Big, bold text slamming onto the screen: "STOP RENTING TRAFFIC." Sub-text: "The 'Ad-Tax' is killing your margins."

Animation: Use spring for a heavy 'thud' effect. Background should pulse subtle red.

The Story (4-9s): A transition to a visual representation of a 'Partner Network'.

Visual: A central node (Your Business) connecting to 10 satellite nodes (Partners).

Text: "One Partnership Away from 10x Growth."

Animation: Nodes should pop in sequence using interpolate on the scale property.

The Offer/CTA (9-15s): The Partner.io logo reveal.

Text: "The Infrastructure of Modern Scale."

Action: A sleek, glowing 'Start Scaling' button that pulses at 1.1x scale.

Technical Requirements:

Use useCurrentFrame and useVideoConfig for all animations.

Implement AbsoluteFill for layering.

Use interpolate for all opacity and transform transitions (e.g., [0, 10], [0, 1] for fade-ins).

Ensure the code is modular, with separate functional components for the 'Hook', 'NetworkGraph', and 'CTA'.

Use Tailwind CSS for all styling (ensure native-tailwind or standard utility classes are applied to the div elements).

Why this works (The Marketing Logic) To ensure your ad is "polished from the start," I’ve structured the prompt to include these specific Brunson-isms:

The Negative Hook: Brunson always starts by attacking the status quo (e.g., "Stop Renting Traffic"). It creates immediate "pattern interrupt."

The "One Thing" Strategy: The ad focuses purely on the power of partnerships, not a list of 50 features. It sells the result, not the software.

The Epiphany Bridge: By moving from the "pain" of ads to the "network graph," the viewer has a mini-epiphany: "Oh, I don't need more money for ads, I need a better system for partners."

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