I’m Brandon Lee Wyatt—an invited member of Sora House, director of chaos, and the person who finally gave creators a prompt engine that doesn’t feel like homework. My generator is simple: punch one subject into the field, tap the exact handles you want in the scene, hit Generate, and boom—you’ve got a golden-hour Bayheim storyboard in two seconds. Not a draft. A finished, camera-ready prompt with dialogue, music cues, lens specs, and that signature crushed orange-and-teal glow Sora keeps trying to copy.
The golden-hour formula
Everything I build leans into the Michael Bay energy Sora nails when you treat it like an IMAX camera. My engine packs each prompt with:
- Hyper-cinematic beats. Drone sweeps, handheld whip-pans, explosive push-ins, 240 fps noodles—all timed to the beat drops.
- Lockable cast. Pick @shanesnipez, @acadiancinema, @erin_nicole, @cj_jones, or any custom handle you want. The script will only mention the talent you choose.
- Instant remixes. One button flips the scene into a music video with editable rap lyrics. Another lets you rewrite dialogue without touching the rest of the treatment.
- Subject-first chaos. Type “a turtle who thinks he’s a dog,” “grandma DJ battle,” or “ramen spirit that bites back.” The generator maps the Bayheim structure on top instantly.
That’s the difference: the subject line can be nonsense, but the output is always structured for a director who’s ready to shoot.
Sora House uses it too
Sora House is the loudest creator collective on the platform—Shane Snipez (@shanesnipez) built the foundation, invited me in, and still leads the charge with selfie-style comedy bangers (think him hanging off the outside of a rocket yelling “let me in”). Sam (@acadiancinema) is my day-one Sora buddy, Erin (@erin_nicole) is the ramen queen, CJ Jones (@cj_jones) just joined with super cinematic lens flare fever dreams, and the rest of the crew rotates in when they can hang. Most days it’s me and Sam grinding at 2 a.m.—we’re always testing new ideas and pushing the limits of what the generator can do. If you’ve seen a Sora clip with mansion parties, trap drums, and neon noodle creatures? Yeah, that came out of my engine.
Every person I hand it to has the same reaction: “Wait, I don’t have to think anymore?” Exactly. Let the director brain chill. The generator already knows how to light the mansion, when to cut to slow-mo, and how to make sure the dialogue punches.
Access isn’t public—on purpose
This isn’t an app store toy. If you want access, tap into the Sora Worlds Discord, then bookmark the Sora Worlds prompt generator. Keep the energy high, keep the clips premium, and the generator will feel like home.
You can also follow my Sora profile @brandonleewyatt to see how I’m using the generator daily. Every music video, every cinematic, party clip that breaks Sora—it all runs through this system.
Why I’m telling you now
AI “prompt tools” keep promising creativity, then micromanage you into templates that look like stock footage. I want the opposite. My generator respects the Sora directors who live in the trenches, balancing story, pacing, and community vibes without a safety net. I’d rather ship an opinion piece, take you behind the curtain, and make it clear: if you want our look, you work with us or you earn your invite.
The era of sterile prompt kits is over. The future is clicking one button and getting a Bayheim epic that feels like your crew shot it themselves.