{"id":"2047417677350650212","url":"https://x.com/hooeem/status/2047417677350650212","text":"","author":{"name":"hoeem","username":"hooeem","avatarUrl":"https://pbs.twimg.com/profile_images/1583462717498728455/puvD9UlZ_200x200.jpg"},"createdAt":"Thu Apr 23 20:49:48 +0000 2026","engagement":{"replies":11,"retweets":34,"likes":341,"views":88445},"article":{"title":"I want to master GPT images 2.0.","previewText":"I have combined every AI nerd, designer nerd, prompt nerd, and GPT image nerds advice into one master guide on GPT IMAGES 2.0 to take you from a beginner to a master.\nstoryboards. character sheets.","coverImageUrl":"https://pbs.twimg.com/media/HGnjMiRXgAEpZGe.jpg","content":"I have combined every AI nerd, designer nerd, prompt nerd, and GPT image nerds advice into one master guide on GPT IMAGES 2.0 to take you from a beginner to a master.\n\nstoryboards. character sheets. product mockups. social campaigns. ui concepts. infographics. more.\n\nit is ALL possible using gpt images 2.0.\n\nbeginners will treat this like a better midjourney \"make me a cool comic character\"\n\nthe pros will build workflows and create reusable anchors.\n\nlet me show you where gpt images 2.0 actually dominates at:\n\n1: visual storytelling\n\nopenai's own examples show manga sequences, storyboard breakdowns, comic strips with proper panel pacing.\n\nthis obliterates traditional workflows:\n\n> anime storyboard pages with character continuity social content carousels that convert shot-by-shot video breakdowns comic strips with readable pacing\n\npros script it like directors.\n\n2: character systems\n\nthe breakthrough: reusable character anchors that don't drift between generations.\n\nreal applications:\n\n> youtube channel mascots product characters that scale across campaigns\ngame character development sheets comic protagonist references\n\nyou can make your character (or give it one you have) and utilise it in different scenes like this:\n\n![](https://pbs.twimg.com/media/HGnfaxWWAAA1vtB.jpg)\n\n3: campaigns\n\nopenai in their live demo showed korean hospitality brochures, editorial posters, graphic spreads with typography control.\n\n> product launch campaigns brand asset libraries social campaign visuals presentation materials\n\nyou could generate an entire rebrand concept in 90 minutes. 12 poster variations, 8 social assets, 3 packaging concepts.\n\ntraditional cost: £8,000 gpt images 2.0 cost: NOT THAT...\n\nlook at this:\n\n4: educational content that works\n\nacademic posters, proof visualisations, process diagrams. the cookbook recommends treating these like instructional design briefs.\n\noutput examples:\n\n> step-by-step explainers labeled process charts classroom teaching materials visual instruction guides\n\n5: product development\n\npackaging concepts, virtual try-ons, product photography, collectible designs.\n\napproach difference:\n\namateur: \"make a product photo\" professional: \"create premium product hero shot with luxury styling, studio lighting, white background, product positioned at 3/4 angle\"\n\nANYWAY... those were some examples, but how should you prompt gpt images 2.0?\n\nwell., let's do that.\n\n1: universal prompt\n\nthis template forces clarity.\n\n2: storyboard mastery prompt\n\nresult: storytelling that actually flows.\n\n3: character system\n\n(just upload him), and for follow-up scenes: reference the master sheet. change only pose/setting/lighting.\n\n4: campaigns\n\ncritical detail: put exact copy in quotes. demand verbatim rendering.\n\n5: advanced tactics\n\nthe continuity system\n\ncommunity-tested workflow for character consistency:\n\n1. create master description - appearance only, no scene details\n\n1. name your character - \"alex\" or \"maya\" for reference\n\n1. reuse core details - repeat key appearance elements in follow-ups\n\n1. separate identity from action - change pose/setting, preserve character\n\nexample master description: \"maya, 28, athletic build, shoulder-length dark hair with blue highlights, distinctive green eyes, small scar above left eyebrow, typically wears fitted black jacket\"\n\nfollow-up usage: \"maya [from master description] sitting at cafe table, laptop open, morning lighting, 3/4 view\"\n\nthe editing protocol\n\nalways specify:\n\n- change only: [specific element]\n\n- preserve: [everything else - list explicitly]\n\n- keep same: [lighting/pose/background/colours]\n\nexample: \"change only the laptop screen to show financial charts. preserve maya's pose, facial expression, lighting, background, clothing. keep everything else identical.\"\n\nquality scaling strategy\n\nlow quality: drafts, exploration, concept development medium quality: social media assets, presentations, internal usehigh quality: print materials, final deliverables, client work.\n\nNOW THEN... what about common failures? well here's there instant fixes:\n\nproblem: character drifts between images\n\nfix: character anchor system. master description. repeat core details.\n\nproblem: text appears but isn't exact\n\nfix: shorten text, use quotes, specify typography, increase quality setting.\n\nproblem: edits change too much\n\nfix: \"change only X\" protocol. list what must stay identical.\n\nproblem: output looks generic\n\nfix: specific materials, lighting, framing. avoid \"make it look good.\"\n\nproblem: layouts feel cluttered\n\nfix: write like design brief. specify hierarchy, spacing, typography rules.\n\nthe mindset that wins\n\nbeginners ask: \"what prompt should i write?\"\n\nprofessionals ask: \"what workflow builds the deliverable i need?\"\n\nthe difference is systems thinking.\n\npros use gpt images 2.0 as:\n\n> storyboard production engine character development tool campaign asset generator\nlocalisation multiplier concept development accelerator\n\nthey don't prompt better. they build better systems.\n\nhere's what matters most\n\nstop thinking \"image generator.\"\n\nstart thinking \"visual production system.\"\n\nthe real power: turning ideas into deliverable assets. storyboards that tell stories. character sheets that scale. campaigns that convert. mockups that sell. content that works.\n\ntreat it like a professional collaborator with clear briefs, not a creative slot machine.\n\nyour next move: pick one deliverable type. storyboards, character sheets, or campaign assets.\n\nmaster that workflow first. let me know what you're going to try first!"},"adhxContext":{"savedByCount":1,"publicTags":[],"previewUrl":"https://adhx.com/hooeem/status/2047417677350650212"}}