


And… there’s always a chance Final Draft will release a screenwriting app down the line. That said, if you’ve been looking for a way to read and annotate screenplays in the Final Draft format, check out Final Draft Reader on Feb 16th. Yeah, it’s AWESOME… just not what we were expecting. I was disappointed.First i tried to enable DropBox sync in Storyist, but then realized Storyist requires the native Scrivener file to be saved on iCloud Drive. It’s the sort of bummed feeling one gets after hearing mountains of rumors about a 3D, brainwave reading iPad that can make coffee and fold laundry, only to watch Apple announce the iPad 2. As I wrote in my last entry, I was excited when I read Ricardo Sanchez’s article on the integration of Storyist and Scrivener.Full of anticipation, I plunked down my 15 and downloaded Storyist. You can effortlessly import your Final Draft version 8 scripts into the Final Draft Reader app to read and annotate anywhere, anytime.īottom line is this. Like no other mobile scriptwriting app available, the Final Draft Reader app displays Final Draft™ scripts on your iPad exactly as they appear on your desktop – perfectly paginated to industry standards. Their own marketing department tells the story quite nicely: I’d go into all the features, but there aren’t that many. I’ve been using Final Draft Reader (under NDA) for a few weeks now, and I have to say, it works quite well. So, what does it do? It allows users to review and annotate scripts in the Final Draft format on their iPad. Therefore, we must judge the app based on its own merits, and not based on what we hoped it would do. So, while the app isn’t what we were anticipating, it DOES align with what they promised. In order to integrate with future Final Draft products, we’ve redefined the development roadmap of our Final Draft Mobile app…The Final Draft Mobile app for iOS will augment the overall Final Draft user experience, providing our community a seamless creative work flow between the Final Draft desktop client, Final Draft Mobile, and future Final Draft services. That was all of US! Here’s what they actually said: But the fact is, Final Draft never said they were releasing a screenwriting app. I admit, I was bummed when I heard the news. I’m sure that will come as a major disappointment to many. It has no screenwriting functionality at all.

The app is officially called Final Draft Reader, and as you guessed, it’s meant for reading Final Draft scripts on the go. The bad news: This is not the application we were expecting. With an intuitive interface that puts you in control, Storyist provides: Word processor with a page-layout view and support for headers, footers, and style sheets Storyboard with customizable story sheets for tracking your plot, characters, and settings and. The good news: Final Draft has finally set a release date for their mobile app (Feb 16th). Storyist is a powerful story-development tool for novelists and screenwriters. Screenwriters around the world have been waiting for Final Draft to come to the iPad. And, it’s easily the most anticipated Screenwriting app ever to come to a mobile device. Its progress has been covered at length in multiple HHH articles (see links below). It’s been the topic of heated discussions since we launched over two years ago. Hooray (sort of)! Final Draft is finally coming to the iPad (sort of)! Isn’t that great? Sort of.
