Built for the production you're making, not for a podcast app. Paste a line, pick a voice, hear it back in seconds. Library voices, your own cloned voice, an actor's voice you've licensed.
He woke earlier. The path through the pines was still wet from the night before. He walked.
Every text-to-speech product on the market is shaped around the same use case: read me an article. They optimize for length, batch processing, and the kind of even tone that survives an hour-long episode. None of that is what production needs.
Production needs the one line, in the right voice, for the cut that's already in the timeline. A scene needs narration that lands. A trailer needs a single read that earns the cut. A teaser needs a voice that sounds like the film, not like a podcast app's default.
Narration is the voiceover primitive for people making things, not for people listening to them. Paste the line. Pick the voice. Hear it back. Drop it in the timeline. Move on.
No batch queues, no project setup, no "creating a podcast." Open the tool, narrate, download.
Not a session file. Not a project. The thing your editor needed an hour ago.
Narration is in open beta. Thirty minutes of audio per day, refreshed at UTC midnight. No card, no upgrade prompt, no tier ladder.
Open Narration. Paste. Generate. Drop it in the cut.
Start narrating →