Kids draw something on paper. You snap a photo or scan it. Doodle Dreams turns that sketch into an animated video.
The AI handles animation automatically. Upload the drawing and wait for processing. Every detail from the original gets preserved in the video—you can download and share once it's done.
There's a Doodle Hub with drawing packs ready to color. Animals. Fantasy worlds. Various themed collections. The packs are optimized for Doodle Dreams animation, which matters if you want clean results. Monthly updates bring new packs. Access depends on your plan.
Three subscription tiers exist. Doodler runs $3.75 monthly when billed yearly. It gives you 5 animations per month and 3 drawing packs. Sketcher costs $7.50 monthly on annual billing, bumps you to 15 animations and unlocks all packs. Animator at $16.58 monthly gets you 50 animations and everything else. Yearly billing saves 25% on the first two plans, 31% on the top one.
A children's librarian running weekly art workshops could batch-animate drawings from each session. Parents looking to make bedtime stories more interactive have another option here. Drawing packs help if your kid isn't sure what to sketch (though they're still coloring templates rather than fully original prompts).
No free tier exists. No API or developer access either. This is strictly a consumer product aimed at families who want to see drawings move.