Why this site exists and how it is maintained
AI Cat Meme Generator started as a simple story-to-video utility, but it is being expanded into a more complete creator resource. The goal is to help people make playful short-form meme videos, understand the workflow behind them, and reuse assets responsibly across editing tools and publishing platforms.
Project scope
This site focuses on a narrow topic on purpose. Everything here is built around AI-assisted meme video creation, especially short videos that combine simple story beats, recognizable character emotion, and fast editing loops. The site does not try to cover every kind of AI media creation. Instead, it stays centered on prompts, scenes, subtitles, reusable cat reactions, green screen clips, and the production decisions that help creators move from idea to finished short.
That focus matters for readers because it keeps the content practical. It also matters for site quality because a tool website can become confusing when it mixes unrelated content just to fill space. The goal here is the opposite: keep the niche clear, make navigation obvious, and add content that deepens the usefulness of the product instead of distracting from it.
Editorial standards
Original guidance
Articles are written specifically for this site. They are intended to explain how the generator, asset workflow, and short-form publishing process fit together in practice.
Product-led documentation
When a page describes a feature, the explanation is tied back to how a creator would use it, not just to a marketing claim. That means showing prompt structure, editing steps, or publishing tradeoffs.
Clear policy access
Privacy, cookies, terms, and contact information are linked from the main navigation and from the homepage footer so readers can quickly understand the service context.
Focused updates
New content should stay relevant to meme video creation, creator workflows, or site operations. Random unrelated posts are intentionally avoided.
How the tool and content support each other
Some visitors arrive ready to generate a video immediately. Others need more context first. A pure single-page tool does not always answer the questions people naturally have before using it: How should I structure a prompt? How can I reuse the assets in an editor? What does the output work best for? What are the boundaries around use and reuse? The long-form guide section exists to answer those questions clearly.
In other words, the tool is the action layer and the editorial section is the explanation layer. Together they create a more complete experience. Someone can land on the homepage, test the generator, browse the library, read a workflow article, then return to create something better informed. That loop is more helpful than sending users into a tool with no context or burying the product behind generic content that does not relate to it.
Who this site is for
Short-form creators
People who publish on TikTok, Reels, or YouTube Shorts and want fast, character-driven meme concepts with reusable formats.
Editors and remixers
Users who want green screen assets, subtitle references, and editing guidance for CapCut, Premiere Pro, or DaVinci Resolve.
Beginners experimenting with AI
People who are curious about AI-assisted storytelling but want a narrow, understandable starting point instead of a general-purpose media suite.
Readers comparing creator tools
Visitors who need to understand what this tool does, what it does not do, and whether it fits their workflow before they invest time.
Content maintenance and quality checks
Pages are reviewed for broken internal links, readability, and consistency with the product's actual behavior. The homepage, policy pages, and guide pages are linked together so users can move through the site without running into dead ends. When the product experience changes, the explanatory content should be updated alongside it rather than left behind as stale documentation.
This is especially important for a tool site because good content alone is not enough if the surrounding structure feels incomplete. A well-maintained site should make it easy to find legal pages, understand the product, contact the publisher, and discover meaningful articles without guessing where that information lives.
