Microdramas have already conquered the tiny vertical screen. Character.AI wants to make the experience even more immersive. The chatbot platform has launched c.ai Series, a collection of original, mobile-first microdramas created by its in-house studio. Each show consists of bite-sized vertical episodes, although watching is only half the experience. Viewers can also chat directly with the characters afterwards, revisit moments from the story, explore relationships, or begin entirely new storylines.
It is the latest attempt to blend streaming with audience participation. Netflix recently took another route with Unhinged, a horror game that turns a viewer’s phone into a controller and allows them to call during gameplay. Meanwhile, Character.AI is bringing interactivity into the fiction itself by keeping its characters available long after an episode ends.

Drama over? Just message the cast
The initial lineup contains three shows. Last Summer is an anime romance involving memories and secret admirers, while The Nighttime Game follows friends trapped in a deadly supernatural card game. Eden Fall throws elite players into a virtual competition where dying in the game also means dying in reality.
Each series contains 10 episodes running under two minutes apiece. The first eight episodes are free, while the final two sit behind a paywall. The shows are available through a new entertainment tab inside Character.AI’s mobile app, alongside the company’s existing audio dramas.
The post-episode chats are currently restricted to users over 18. Each episode reportedly uses its own specialized language model that can only draw from information already revealed onscreen, reducing the chance that an overeager chatbot spoils the next twist.

AI made the shows, and humans are still involved
Character.AI says the series was created by a human-led studio team whose credits span Netflix, Nickelodeon, DreamWorks, and Blumhouse. Writers developed the scripts and extensive story bibles before the company’s proprietary AI pipeline generated visuals and audio for conventional editing and post-production.
The result is an almost entirely AI-generated animated production rather than the inexpensive live-action soap operas commonly associated with apps such as ReelShort and DramaBox. Character.AI CEO Karandeep Anand told The Verge that the company deliberately avoided rushing out what he described as video slop, although early impressions still noted occasional stiff expressions and clunky dialogue.