Introducing AI Video Generation — Turn Any Topic into an Animated Video in 2 Minutes
We're launching the most ambitious feature in Coachingle's history: AI-generated educational videos with narration, motion graphics, and character voices. Here's how it works and why it changes everything.
Why we built this
For two years, the Coachingle team watched students convert cheatsheets to voice memos, re-record them with their own narration, and upload them to YouTube for personal use. The pattern was clear: students don't just want text — they want video. Something they can watch on the bus, during breaks, or in bed with eyes closed.
AI-generated educational video has been technically possible for about a year. The problem has been quality. Most AI video today is either generic stock-footage with text overlays (boring) or hyper-realistic but context-free (unreliable for facts). Neither works for exam prep.
How it works
A Coachingle AI video is produced in three stages:
- Storyboard generation. The AI converts your topic into a scene-by-scene script: what each visual shows, what the narrator says, and what the learning objective is. This happens in about 15 seconds.
- Narration synthesis. We use a two-voice podcast format — one voice asks questions, the other explains. Both voices are AI-generated but tuned for Indian English accents. Available in Hindi-English hybrid too.
- Visual assembly. Each scene gets keyframe-aligned motion graphics, diagrams, and optional character illustrations. The final render takes 60-90 seconds on our pipeline.
The whole flow is under 2 minutes from topic input to finished video.
What this unlocks
- Audio learners who previously used the podcast format now get synchronized visuals.
- Visual learners preparing for JEE Physics, NEET Biology, or UPSC Geography can see concepts animate.
- Revision becomes passive: watch a 2-minute video while cooking or commuting.
What it doesn't do (yet)
The videos aren't a replacement for deep study. They're a first-pass revision tool. For NEET Biology or UPSC current affairs, the factual accuracy is high. For long-form derivations (JEE integral calculus), a cheatsheet is still the better format. We'll ship math-heavy video tuning later this quarter.
Try it free at coachingle.com/quickcram — 10 free video generations per day, no signup required.