Carousel Studio

Repurpose X Threads into LinkedIn & Instagram Carousels

Thread Truncated (Cap Enforced)

Only the first 20 tweets are unrolled into slides to ensure reliable PDF exporting and high server performance.

Canvas & Ratio

Choose your destination platform format


Layout Template

Choose a content structure for your slides


Preset Themes


Typography & Sizing

Title Font Size36px
Body Font Size18px
Header & Footer Size12px

Brand Kit Customization

AGENCY

Configure brand assets for headers & footers

MULTI-PROFILES (AGENCY)
AGENCY
SAVE PRESETS (AGENCY)

Outro Slide CTA

Customize your closing call-to-action slide

#1
#2
#3

Background Pattern

Source Content

Build Your Carousel

Drag and drop any post card below onto a slide, or use the quick buttons to insert content/images instantly!

Drag Post #1
Digi (Delusional)
@digiii

<b>"We become what we repeatedly do." — <i>Sean Covey </i></b><i></i>

Apply Image
Drag Post #2
Digi (Delusional)
@digiii

---

Drag Post #3
Digi (Delusional)
@digiii

---

Drag Post #4
Digi (Delusional)
@digiii

<b>"Volume negates luck." — Alex Hormozi </b>

Drag Post #5
Digi (Delusional)
@digiii

The more attempts that you make directly equates to your mathematical probability of success.

Drag Post #6
Digi (Delusional)
@digiii

The higher your volume input, the more you minimize the role of chance, and accelerate your learning through repetition.

Drag Post #7
Digi (Delusional)
@digiii

If you have a 10% chance of succeeding at a task, making 10 attempts gives you roughly a 65% chance of succeeding at least once, while making 20 attempts pushes your odds to 87%.

Drag Post #8
Digi (Delusional)
@digiii

The more shots that you take, the higher chance you have of making it.

Drag Post #9
Digi (Delusional)
@digiii

Let us think of the Greeks, The Romans, The Macedonians:

Drag Post #10
Digi (Delusional)
@digiii

Great conquerers, Rulers of nations, master tacticians, Military genius.

Drag Post #11
Digi (Delusional)
@digiii

How did they get there? It was not by accident.

Drag Post #12
Digi (Delusional)
@digiii

They fought many battles and wars. They learned from their mistakes and the mistakes of others. They took chances. Their volume input was extremely high. They did not settle for mediocre. They wanted it all and went and got it.

Drag Post #13
Digi (Delusional)
@digiii

---

Drag Post #14
Digi (Delusional)
@digiii

We remember Alexander the Great today because he built one of the largest empires in the ancient world and for his unprecedented and undefeated military record. In just 13 years, his empire stretched from Greece to Egypt and as far as northwestern India.

Drag Post #15
Digi (Delusional)
@digiii

After conquering all, “<b>when Alexander saw the breadth of his domain, he wept, for there were no more worlds to conquer.</b>”

Drag Post #16
Digi (Delusional)
@digiii

The people we remember thousands of years later have many things in common but one was input volume. They mastered what they did because they failed more times than their competitors tried.

Drag Post #17
Digi (Delusional)
@digiii

Spartan warriors were not feared for nothing. They were fierce warriors.

Drag Post #18
Digi (Delusional)
@digiii

<b>"The Agoge:</b> Starting at age 7, Spartan boys entered a brutal, state-mandated educational and training system designed to strip away individuality and forge absolute obedience, physical endurance, and combat mastery."

Drag Post #19
Digi (Delusional)
@digiii

Their input volume happened everyday from the age of 7. They trained without fail, without days off, without any distractions.

Drag Post #20
Digi (Delusional)
@digiii

Their volume was higher than that of their foes and that is why they won so many battles.