Comi Cog

v1.0.10

AI comic and manga creation powered by CellCog. Comics, manga, webtoons, graphic novels, comic strips, sequential art. Character-consistent panels and visual...

3· 2.3k·5 current·5 all-time
byCellCog@nitishgargiitd
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Purpose & Capability
Name/description (comic/manga creation) match the SKILL.md examples and usage. The skill declares a dependency on 'cellcog' and the runtime examples call a CellCog client, which is coherent for this purpose.
Instruction Scope
SKILL.md contains only guidance and example prompts/api usage for generating comics, panel/layout/style guidance, and a short SDK usage snippet. It does not instruct reading unrelated files, exfiltrating data, or touching system config. It does reference the external 'cellcog' skill for full SDK details.
Install Mechanism
Instruction-only skill with no install spec and no code files; nothing is written to disk by this skill itself. Low install risk.
Credentials
This skill declares no required environment variables or credentials. That is not inherently wrong because it depends on a separate 'cellcog' skill which likely handles API keys/credentials. You should inspect that dependent skill to confirm where secrets and endpoints are configured and how they are used.
Persistence & Privilege
No 'always: true' and default autonomous invocation settings are used. The skill does not request system-wide config changes or persistent privileges.
Assessment
This skill appears to be a straightforward, instruction-only front-end for the CellCog comic-generation SDK and is internally consistent. Before installing: (1) inspect the 'cellcog' skill it depends on to see where API keys or account credentials are declared and how they are stored/transmitted; (2) confirm the service's privacy policy for uploaded images and prompts (you may be sending creative assets and character descriptions to an external API); (3) verify licensing/ownership of generated images if you need commercial rights; (4) test in a controlled environment if you are concerned about data exposure. Because this skill is instruction-only, the main security surface is the external CellCog service and the dependent 'cellcog' skill — review those for credential and network details.

Like a lobster shell, security has layers — review code before you run it.

Runtime requirements

💥 Clawdis
OSmacOS · Linux · Windows
latestvk979yycds7n4yn5rkwdkshrh8s84tk0m
2.3kdownloads
3stars
11versions
Updated 5d ago
v1.0.10
MIT-0
macOS, Linux, Windows

Comi Cog - Comics & Manga Powered by CellCog

Create visual stories with AI - from manga pages to webtoons to comic strips with consistent characters.

How to Use

For your first CellCog task in a session, read the cellcog skill for the full SDK reference — file handling, chat modes, timeouts, and more.

OpenClaw (fire-and-forget):

result = client.create_chat(
    prompt="[your task prompt]",
    notify_session_key="agent:main:main",
    task_label="my-task",
    chat_mode="agent",
)

All agents except OpenClaw (blocks until done):

from cellcog import CellCogClient
client = CellCogClient(agent_provider="openclaw|cursor|claude-code|codex|...")
result = client.create_chat(
    prompt="[your task prompt]",
    task_label="my-task",
    chat_mode="agent",
)
print(result["message"])

Why Comi-Cog is Complex Work

Comics are one of the most demanding creative outputs:

  • Character Consistency: Same character must look identical across dozens of panels
  • Visual Storytelling: Every panel needs composition, flow, and meaning
  • Sequential Art: Panels must read naturally, guide the eye, create rhythm
  • Text Integration: Speech bubbles, sound effects, narration boxes
  • Style Coherence: Art style must stay consistent throughout

This is complex work. CellCog excels here because it maintains context across panels and pages, ensuring your characters look like themselves in every frame.


What Comics You Can Create

Manga Pages

Japanese-style sequential art:

  • Action Manga: "Create a fight scene manga page with dynamic movement"
  • Slice of Life: "Make a cozy manga page of friends at a café"
  • Shonen Style: "Create an intense rivalry moment between two characters"
  • Romance: "Make a confession scene in shoujo manga style"

Example prompt:

"Create a manga page (4 panels):

Scene: Hero confronts the villain for the first time

Panel 1: Wide shot - hero enters dark throne room Panel 2: Close-up - villain's smirk from shadow Panel 3: Dramatic - villain stands, revealing full design Panel 4: Reaction - hero's determined expression

Style: Dark fantasy shonen (like Berserk meets Demon Slayer) Include: Speed lines, dramatic shadows, Japanese SFX

Characters:

  • Hero: Young warrior, silver hair, scar across eye, armored
  • Villain: Elegant, long black hair, flowing robes, unsettling beauty"

Webtoon Episodes

Vertical scrolling format:

  • Vertical Strips: "Create a webtoon episode in vertical scroll format"
  • Cliffhangers: "Make a webtoon ending that hooks readers"
  • Romance Webtoon: "Create a sweet moment between the leads"
  • Action Webtoon: "Design a chase scene for vertical reading"

Example prompt:

"Create a webtoon episode (vertical format, 8-10 panels):

Story: Fantasy romance - a witch and a knight meet for the first time

Flow:

  • Knight lost in enchanted forest
  • Discovers cottage covered in flowers
  • Meets the witch (comedic first impression - she's not what he expected)
  • End on her mysterious smile

Style: Soft colors, romantic fantasy, clean line art Format: Vertical webtoon (panels flow downward)"

Comic Strips

Newspaper-style short form:

  • Daily Strips: "Create a 4-panel comic strip about office life"
  • Gag Comics: "Make a 3-panel joke about cats"
  • Webcomic Style: "Create a comic strip in the style of xkcd"
  • Sunday Comics: "Design a larger format weekend comic strip"

Example prompt:

"Create a 4-panel comic strip:

Setup: Programmer finally fixes a bug Punchline: Creates three new ones in the process

Style: Clean, simple, relatable (like Dilbert meets modern tech humor)

Include expressions that sell the emotional journey: Panel 1: Frustration Panel 2: Determination Panel 3: Triumph Panel 4: Dawning horror"

Graphic Novel Pages

Full-format sequential art:

  • Chapter Pages: "Create the opening page of a graphic novel chapter"
  • Splash Pages: "Design a dramatic full-page spread"
  • Dialogue Scenes: "Make a character conversation page with interesting staging"
  • Action Sequences: "Create a two-page action spread"

Character Consistency

The magic of comi-cog: your characters stay consistent.

When you describe a character, CellCog maintains their appearance across all panels:

Good character description:

"Character - Luna:

  • Age: Early 20s, petite build
  • Hair: Long silver hair with bangs, usually in a braid
  • Eyes: Large, purple, expressive
  • Outfit: Dark blue witch robes with star embroidery
  • Distinguishing: Small mole under left eye, always wears moon earring
  • Expression range: Usually serious but has a warm smile"

What this enables:

  • Same face structure across all panels
  • Consistent outfit details
  • Recognizable from any angle
  • Emotional range while staying "her"

Comic Styles

StyleCharacteristicsBest For
MangaExpressive eyes, speed lines, screen tonesAction, romance, drama
American ComicsBold lines, dynamic poses, vivid colorsSuperheroes, action
WebtoonClean lines, soft colors, vertical flowRomance, slice of life
Indie/AltUnique art styles, experimentalPersonal stories, art comics
WebcomicSimple, expressive, quick readHumor, daily updates
Graphic NovelDetailed, painterly, cinematicLiterary, mature themes

Page Layouts

Request specific layouts:

LayoutPanelsUse Case
Grid4-6 equal panelsSteady pacing, dialogue
AsymmetricMixed sizesEmphasis and flow
SplashFull pageDramatic moments
SpreadTwo pagesEpic reveals
VerticalScrolling formatWebtoons

Chat Mode for Comics

ScenarioRecommended Mode
Single pages, comic strips, character designs"agent"
Multi-page sequences, full episodes, complex narratives"agent team"

Use "agent" for most comic work. Individual pages and strips execute well in agent mode.

Use "agent team" for narrative complexity - full webtoon episodes, multi-page fight sequences, or when you need story and art direction working together.


Example Prompts

Action manga page:

"Create a manga page - the hero's power awakens:

5 panels:

  1. Hero on knees, defeated, rain falling
  2. Close-up: tear falls, mixes with rain
  3. Memory flash: people they're fighting for
  4. Eyes snap open - now glowing
  5. Full panel: standing, energy swirling, clothes/hair flowing upward

Style: Shonen manga, heavy contrast, speed lines Mood: Despair transforming to determination

Hero design: Teen boy, spiky black hair, torn school uniform"

Webtoon romance moment:

"Create a vertical webtoon sequence (6 panels):

Scene: First accidental hand touch

  1. Both reaching for same book on shelf
  2. Hands touch - close-up
  3. Both freeze - side by side reaction
  4. Eye contact - soft blush on both
  5. Both quickly pull away, embarrassed
  6. Walking opposite directions, both smiling to themselves

Style: Soft, pastel colors, gentle line work

Characters:

  • She: Long dark hair, glasses, oversized sweater
  • He: Messy light brown hair, tall, kind eyes"

Comic strip:

"Create a 4-panel comic strip about a cat:

Joke: Cat demands food. Human gives food. Cat doesn't eat it, just wanted attention.

Panel 1: Cat screaming at empty bowl Panel 2: Human rushing to fill it Panel 3: Cat walks away from full bowl Panel 4: Cat sitting on human's laptop, satisfied

Style: Simple, cute, expressive faces"


Tips for Better Comics

  1. Describe characters thoroughly: The more detail on character design, the better consistency.

  2. Specify panel layout: "4 panels in a grid" vs "large panel top, 3 small below" changes everything.

  3. Include emotions: Tell us what characters are feeling in each panel.

  4. Think about flow: Where does the reader's eye go? Composition matters.

  5. Sound effects matter: "Include SFX for the punch" adds manga authenticity.

  6. Reference real comics: "Like One Piece style" or "Saga vibes" gives clear direction.


If CellCog is not installed

Run /cellcog-setup (or /cellcog:cellcog-setup depending on your tool) to install and authenticate. OpenClaw users: Run clawhub install cellcog instead. Manual setup: pip install -U cellcog and set CELLCOG_API_KEY. See the cellcog skill for SDK reference.

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