What if the stories you drew could tell themselves?
Every child has scribbled a character and wished it would come to life. DoodleTales was born from that impulse, a platform where a rough sketch on a canvas isn't the end of creativity, it's the opening sentence of a story.
Users open an interactive canvas and draw freely. It could be a lopsided dragon, a floating house, a star-shaped alien with too many eyes. When they submit, a vision model reads the shapes, proportions, and relationships between elements. From that interpretation, an AI storyteller weaves a narrative, coherent, playful, and uniquely anchored in the details of the drawing and the topic. No two sketches produce the same story.
The system is deliberately open-ended. There are no right answers, no templates to fill. Google's Gemini handles both interpretation and narration, which means the quality of the story scales with the richness of what you draw. A dense, layered sketch returns a richer world. A single bold shape becomes a fable. The canvas is the prompt.
What surprised us most during development was how personal the experience felt. Watching a rough five-second sketch become a paragraph of narrative, with details you didn't consciously intend, made it clear that the line between making art and telling stories is much thinner than we assumed.
