Paste the repo link. AI reads the README, writes a script, and produces a narrated demo with animated code and terminals — in about a minute.
Your README already explains the project — installation, usage, why it exists. But nobody outside your repo reads it. A short narrated video of the same content travels much further: it works on X, in a Show HN thread, on a landing page, in a launch email.
ireel reads the README the way a developer would: it keeps your real commands, your real API, your actual feature names, and turns them into an IDE-style video — typed install commands, code that writes itself line by line, terminal output that appears as the narrator explains it. No timeline editor, no stock footage, nothing to learn.
Public repos work by link. For a private one, paste the README markdown directly instead — nothing is stored beyond your video.
No. The script is grounded in your README — real commands, real names, real numbers. Quality gates strip anything that isn't in the source.
READMEs usually get the Console style — an animated IDE window with typed code and terminals. You can pick any of 20+ styles before generating.
About a minute for a typical README. You watch it render live.
Paste a link, watch it render. Free reels every month, no credit card.