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Create frame-by-frame cartoons with intuitive drawing tools, audio tracks, and easy sharing to social platforms

Create frame-by-frame cartoons with intuitive drawing tools, audio tracks, and easy sharing to social platforms

Vote (6 votes)

Program license Free

Developer Visual Blasters LLC

Version 4.2.33

Works under Android

Also known as FlipaClip

Vote

(6 votes)

Developer

Visual Blasters LLC

Works under

Android

Program license

Free

Version

4.2.33

Also known as

FlipaClip

Pros

  • Intuitive frame-by-frame interface that is friendly to beginners and hobby animators
  • Solid free toolkit with brushes, text, blend modes, and glow effect included
  • Helpful animation aids such as onion skinning, grids, and frame scrubbing
  • Six audio tracks, voice recording, imported audio, and sound effects packs integrated into the timeline
  • Flexible export options (MP4, GIF, PNG sequence) and direct sharing to major social platforms
  • Community events and challenges that keep users engaged and practicing

Cons

  • Animating over video is locked behind a premium upgrade, while photo-based projects stay free
  • Free version is limited to three layers, which can constrain more complex scenes
  • Occasional audio playback issues where sound briefly starts from the wrong section
  • Undo and redo controls are missing in some views that rely on the hide option
  • No specialized lineart brush, so clean inking requires workarounds with existing tools

FlipaClip - Cartoon animation is a frame-by-frame animation app for Android that turns your phone or tablet into a digital flipbook. You draw on individual frames, play them back as a cartoon, then export the result as a video, GIF, or PNG sequence to share anywhere.

This app suits beginners, aspiring animators, meme makers, and storyboard artists who want to learn the basics of 2D animation or quickly sketch ideas. More experienced creators can also use it for animatics, short loops, or social content on the go.

Friendly interface for drawing and sketching

FlipaClip centers its experience on a clean drawing workspace, with tools that feel familiar if you have used any illustration app before. You get practical essentials such as brushes, lasso, fill, eraser, ruler shapes, a mirror tool, and text with multiple fonts, all available in the free version.

Canvas size can be customized, which helps whether you are sketching a rough storyboard or planning something sized for social platforms. Pressure-sensitive stylus support, including Samsung S Pen and SonarPen, gives you more control over line weight and opacity than finger drawing alone.

The brush system works well for general sketching and coloring, but one drawback is the lack of a dedicated lineart-oriented pen. You can approximate clean outlines by tweaking the existing calligraphy-style tools and stabilization, yet a purpose-built lineart brush would make crisp, consistent inking easier.

Animation tools that teach the basics well

At its core, FlipaClip is a frame-by-frame animation app. Each drawing becomes a frame in a timeline, and you play them in sequence to create motion. The layout is straightforward enough that many people learn animation principles directly inside the app.

Helpful features include:

- An animation timeline with essential controls

- Onion skinning, so you can see faint versions of previous and next frames

- A frames viewer to rearrange or inspect your drawings

- Overlay grids to keep proportions and motion consistent

- Frame scrubbing, giving fine control over playback while you refine motion

Layer support is a major strength. The free version lets you work with up to three layers per project, enough for simple characters, backgrounds, and effects. If you upgrade, you can expand to as many as ten layers, which is more comfortable for complex scenes.

Visual effects such as blend modes and a glow effect are available at no additional cost, which helps you experiment with lighting and shading without extra plugins.

FlipaClip has become popular for many styles: traditional cartoons, animé-inspired clips, stick figures, drawing over video, stop motion setups, Gacha and furry content, quick fandom edits, music-driven animations, and loopable pieces (including NFT-style loops). It is also widely used for storyboarding and animatics, covering the pre-production step all the way to short finished stories.

Audio, photos, and video: strong but divided by paywall

Sound is a significant part of FlipaClip. The app lets you:

- Work across six audio tracks in the free tier

- Record your own voice directly into the timeline

- Import audio files from your device

- Use curated sound effects packs for extra polish

That combination makes it practical to add dialogue, simple sound design, or music timing inside the same project, instead of juggling a separate editor afterward.

However, audio is also where some technical rough edges show. There are reports of audio clips starting from the wrong point when playing from the beginning, briefly jumping to the middle of the sound before correcting itself. If you rely closely on lip-sync or rhythm, this kind of glitch can become frustrating during previews.

On the visual side, FlipaClip supports importing photos and videos, including use cases like rotoscoping (drawing over footage frame by frame). Here the free-versus-premium divide is clearer. Free users can comfortably animate over images, but using videos as a base for animation is treated as a premium feature, which limits how far you can push reference-based or rotoscope-heavy work without paying.

Exporting and sharing your animations

Once your project is ready, FlipaClip provides flexible export choices:

- MP4 video files, suitable for most platforms

- GIFs, ideal for short loops

- PNG image sequences with transparency, useful if you plan to assemble or post-process in other software

From inside the app, you can share your creations directly to major platforms like TikTok, YouTube, Instagram, Twitter, Bilibili, Facebook, Tumblr, and others. This tight integration supports the many creators who use FlipaClip to publish memes, short skits, and fan animations regularly.

The app also runs periodic challenges and contests that anyone can join for free. These events, combined with active communities on social platforms, help motivate practice and offer visibility if you like sharing your work.

Free features vs premium upgrade

FlipaClip follows a free-with-optional-upgrade model. The free package is generous in several areas:

- Core drawing tools and text

- Canvas customization

- Up to three animation layers per project

- Glow effect and blend modes

- Onion skinning, timeline, grids, and frame controls

- Audio editing with six tracks, voice recording, and imported files

- Export to MP4, GIF, or PNG sequences

- Participation in community challenges

Upgrading mainly benefits users who need more technical headroom. You can increase the layer limit up to ten, which is a practical improvement for detailed scenes with multiple characters and effects. In addition, animating on top of video content is treated as a premium capability, so anyone who relies on video references, such as dance animations or rotoscoped motion, may feel nudged toward the paid tier.

For casual users stick figures, simple memes, basic storyboards the free version covers a surprising amount of ground. Animators who want to integrate footage heavily or build more layered scenes will feel the premium constraints sooner.

Usability, learning curve, and small frustrations

FlipaClip has been recognized by Google Play as an App of the Year and has surpassed 30 million downloads worldwide, which reflects how approachable it is for newcomers. Many people learn timing, spacing, and other fundamentals inside this single app, especially when creating memes or short loops.

The interface is generally intuitive, with tools and timeline controls laid out so that drawing and playback feel direct rather than buried in menus. However, there are a few workflow issues to keep in mind:

- When using specific modes tied to the hide option, undo and redo buttons are not available. That forces you to leave that view or take extra steps if you make a mistake, interrupting the flow of drawing.

- The audio playback quirk, where sound momentarily starts from the middle before correcting, can break concentration when you repeatedly preview from the start.

- The brush system covers basics well, yet line-focused artists may miss a dedicated lineart pen, since they currently approximate this look through existing calligraphy-style brushes and stabilization settings.

Despite these issues, the overall experience still feels positive for most use cases. For learning, personal projects, and short online content, the balance of power and simplicity is strong.

Pros

  • Intuitive frame-by-frame interface that is friendly to beginners and hobby animators
  • Solid free toolkit with brushes, text, blend modes, and glow effect included
  • Helpful animation aids such as onion skinning, grids, and frame scrubbing
  • Six audio tracks, voice recording, imported audio, and sound effects packs integrated into the timeline
  • Flexible export options (MP4, GIF, PNG sequence) and direct sharing to major social platforms
  • Community events and challenges that keep users engaged and practicing

Cons

  • Animating over video is locked behind a premium upgrade, while photo-based projects stay free
  • Free version is limited to three layers, which can constrain more complex scenes
  • Occasional audio playback issues where sound briefly starts from the wrong section
  • Undo and redo controls are missing in some views that rely on the hide option
  • No specialized lineart brush, so clean inking requires workarounds with existing tools