Script Structure for Viral Hits
Ch04 Viral Script Structure Formula
Short drama is not a "short movie." It has its own rhythm logic: emotional stimulation denser than any other screen format, an emotional peak every 3โ5 minutes, and a hook at every episode's end that makes watching the next episode feel mandatory. Mastering this structural formula is what makes AI-generated scripts actually good.
The 3-Second Hook Principle
Platform algorithms weight completion rate heavily. But completion rate is determined not by how good the content is overall โ it's determined by whether the user stops scrolling in the first 3 seconds. ByteDance internal data shows: content losing 60%+ of viewers in the first 3 seconds almost never achieves above 15% completion rate, regardless of later quality.
Five 3-Second Hook Types
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Extreme conflict opening: Put the most intense conflict moment at frame one. Never open with backstory.
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Mystery reveal opening: Show a strong result without explaining the cause โ generate immediate "how did this happen?" curiosity.
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Emotional eruption opening: Show a character at peak emotional breakdown. Triggers viewer empathy immediately. Best for romance.
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Visual shock opening: Extreme visual contrast or beauty grabs attention before the mind catches up. Best for xianxia/sci-fi.
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Dialogue hook opening: Open with a single line of dialogue so provocative it demands an explanation.
The 4-Step Single-Episode Pacing Formula
Hook 0โ30s Drive 30sโ2min Peak 2โ4min Cliffhanger Last 30s
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Hook (0โ30s): One of the 5 hook types. Establish scene and first emotional peak within 30 seconds.
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Drive (30sโ2min): Fast-paced plot advancement through dialogue and action only. One small emotional beat every 30 seconds.
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Peak (2โ4min): The episode's core satisfaction moment. This is where viewers decide whether to continue the series.
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Cliffhanger (last 30s): Immediately after the emotional peak, introduce a new mystery or conflict. Never end an episode with all problems resolved.
Four Core Satisfaction Types
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Revenge satisfaction: The key is the antagonist's public humiliation โ public settings amplify the satisfaction 10x vs. private confrontations.
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Underdog satisfaction: Every improvement must be shown, not told. Use a comparison group (others' changing reactions to the protagonist) as evidence.
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Romance satisfaction: Follow the sweet โ sting โ sweet rhythm. Pure sweetness is cloying. Mild conflict amplifies the next sweet moment.
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Mystery satisfaction: Create dual information asymmetry โ viewers know more than some characters (seeing villain plans) but less than others (not knowing the protagonist's real identity). This creates both superiority and anticipation.
Four Reversal Types
| Type | Design Method | Best Genre | Setup Required |
|---|---|---|---|
| Identity Reversal | Extreme gap between apparent and real identity, revealed at key moment | CEO drama, urban uplift | 3โ5 episodes reinforcing the "weak" surface identity before reveal |
| Ability Reversal | Protagonist demonstrates capability far beyond all expectations | Xianxia, workplace | Concrete skill demonstration scene โ avoid abstract "I'm powerful" declarations |
| Relationship Reversal | Apparent enemy is actually ally, or vice versa | Mystery, CEO drama | Plant retrospectively-valid clues so viewers feel "ah, of course" not "that makes no sense" |
| Motive Reversal | True motive is the opposite of the apparent motive | Mystery, romance | Deliver explanation immediately after reveal to prevent "plot hole" perception |
[TIP] Chapter Action Checklist
- Take the highest-play drama in your target niche and analyze its episode structure using the 4-step framework above.
- Write three different 3-second hook openings for your episode 1 (use three different hook types), then choose the strongest.
- Design a "satisfaction point map" for all 20 episodes: label each episode's core emotion type, ensuring at least one satisfaction point per episode and one major peak every 3 episodes.
- Identify your protagonist's 3 most important reversals. For each, note: setup start (which episode), reveal moment (episode + minute mark).