A storyboard is a visual plan or blueprint for a movie, TV show, video game, or animation. It's like a comic book version of what will happen on screen.
When people work on making films, animations, or even video games, they often start by creating a storyboard. This involves drawing pictures to represent each scene in the story, kind of like sketching out the plot line. For example, imagine you're working on an animated cartoon about a brave knight. You'd draw pictures of the knight riding his horse, fighting dragons, and saving the kingdom. Each picture would be a separate panel in the storyboard, showing what happens next in the story. This helps directors and producers plan out the action, pacing, and overall flow of the movie or show. It's like having a roadmap for the whole project!
A series of drawings that lay out the sequence of scenes in a film or series, especially an animated one.
Example: The storyboard process helps promote brainstorming, highlights missing tasks, and allows the team to incorporate changes prior to traveling too far down a particular path. — By Cheryl A. Malloy & William Cooley, NASA & SAIC here
