LOGSEQ ALTERNATIVE
Storyflow keeps the networked-note thinking Logseq is loved for, ideas linked to ideas rather than filed away, and moves it onto a visual canvas. Connect notes in space by layout and proximity, expand them with AI, and turn the graph into a storyboard or plan on the same board. Free forever, no credit card.
Free plan
No credit card
Works in your browser
Used by creative professionals at:
Artlist
Pixar
Nike
Red Bull
The North Face
Porsche
Pick a board, then let AI fill it in. Every template is a real, editable starting point on the same infinite canvas.

Logseq earned its following honestly. It is open-source and local-first, so your notes are plain Markdown files that live on your own machine, and privacy-conscious people trust it precisely because nothing has to leave their disk. On top of that it is a genuinely good outliner: everything is a bullet, blocks reference each other, bidirectional links connect pages, and a daily-notes journal captures thinking as it happens. Power users build dense, interconnected knowledge graphs in Logseq, and for local-first, text-first networked thought it is a remarkable tool. If your notes are words, you want them woven tightly together, and you want them on your own hardware, Logseq does it well.
The difference is where the knowledge lives and what you see. In Logseq you think in an outline: nested bullets, page links, and a graph view that renders the connections after you write them. You rarely think inside that graph, you read it back. Storyflow is a Logseq alternative that puts the network first and visual. Every note, image, link, and PDF is a card you place on an infinite canvas, and ideas connect in space, by where they sit, what they sit next to, and the lines you draw between them. You are building in the network the whole time, not generating one as a side effect of writing bullets.
Three concrete reasons visual thinkers make the move. First, connections are something you see and arrange, not a graph you occasionally open, so the shape of what you know is always in front of you. Second, an AI reads the board you are working on and can expand a thin cluster or resurface notes you had lost, which a manual outline cannot do on its own. Third, the graph does not stay a graph: turn a web of research into a storyboard, a shot list, a content calendar, or a plan on the same canvas. You can also drop in images, PDFs, and video, and grab frames straight from YouTube and Vimeo, so your knowledge holds more than text. Storyflow runs in the browser rather than on local files, so the trade is a spatial, AI-assisted canvas in exchange for the local-first storage Logseq keeps.
HOW IT WORKS
Capture the way Logseq taught you, then connect and build in a network you can actually see.
01
Open a board in the browser with a free account and drop in notes, links, images, and PDFs as they arrive. No install, no card, no object cap to hit mid-thought.
02
Place related cards near each other and draw links between them. Ideas connect by proximity and position, the same networked thinking Logseq is built on, but visible on one surface instead of rendered in a separate graph view.
03
Point the AI at a thin cluster and ask it to expand, or surface notes you had forgotten. It reads the board you are working on, plus any document or blueprint you @-mention, so it builds on your real material.
04
Turn a web of research into a storyboard, content calendar, or project board on the same canvas, share a view-only link, or export the board as an image or PDF.
Keep the linked-note thinking Logseq is loved for. Lose the rendered graph, the text-only outline, and the dead end after the notes are written.

The network is the workspace
Logseq renders a graph after you write. In Storyflow the network is the canvas itself: every note is a card you place and link by hand, so the connections that matter are always in view and reshaped with a drag, not opened in a separate view.
See the infinite canvas →
See the links, not an outline
Draw connections between notes to build a web of ideas, then cluster and recolor to distill what matters. Instead of scanning nested bullets and a linked-references panel, you see how everything relates at a glance on one board.
See the mind mapping tool →
AI that reads your network
Point at a thin cluster and ask the AI to expand it, or surface notes you had forgotten. It reads the board you are working on, plus any document or blueprint you @-mention, so it grows your real network rather than answering from a blank prompt.
See the AI note taking →
The network becomes the project
A Logseq graph is where the thinking ends. In Storyflow it is the first step: ask the AI to turn a web of research into a storyboard, a shot list, a content calendar, or a plan on the same canvas the notes live on.
See knowledge management →Capture and connect everything on an infinite canvas with no object limit and no time limit. A networked knowledge base you build for years should not expire.
Unlimited boards on an infinite canvas, no object cap
Capture notes, links, images, PDFs, and video frames
Basic AI usage to expand and resurface your notes
Share view-only, or invite collaborators free

BUILT FOR NETWORKED THINKERS
Capture fast, link ideas in space, and move from a network of notes to a real plan without leaving the canvas.

Capture anything, fast
Notes, links, media: Text notes, web links, images, GIFs, and PDFs all attach to the canvas, so you capture a thought in whatever form it arrives, the way Logseq captures a quick bullet, without forcing it into an outline.
Frame grabs from video: Pull stills from YouTube and Vimeo straight onto the board when a moment in a video is the thing worth keeping. A text-only graph cannot hold that.
Depth without clutter: Longer thinking lives as documents on the same canvas, so a card stays scannable and the detail is one click away.

Connect the way you think
Think in space: Place related ideas near each other so the structure of what you know is visible at a glance, instead of read back from nested bullets and a linked-references panel.
Link the relationships: Draw connections between notes to show how they relate, building a web of ideas the way networked thought intends, but on one surface you work in directly.
Reorganize with a drag: As your understanding changes, the map of it changes with a drag. No re-outlining, no hunting for where a block was referenced.

AI on your real material
Reads your active board: The AI works from the board you have open, so it expands and connects your real notes rather than answering from nothing.
@-mention your sources: Bring in up to one Blueprint and three documents as context, so a research doc or brief shapes what the AI surfaces and suggests.
Surface what you forgot: Ask what connects or what is missing, and the AI pulls forward notes and links across the board that you had lost track of.

The network is step one
Clusters become plans: Turn a web of research into a storyboard, content calendar, or project board on the same canvas, with the AI carrying the ideas over.
Share the thinking: Invite collaborators free, or send a view-only link so anyone can explore your network in the browser without an account.
Export as image or PDF: Need a board in a deck or a doc? Export it as a clean image or PDF in one step.
WHO IT IS FOR
Local-outliner fans who want to see the network and build in it.
Capture sources, notes, and PDFs on a canvas, connect the themes in space, and let the AI resurface what links to what. The network stays visible instead of hidden behind a graph view.
Keep every idea, reference, and clipping as a connected web, then turn the cluster that excites you into an outline or storyboard on the same canvas.
Build linked notes the way Logseq and Zettelkasten teach, but see and arrange the connections directly instead of writing bullets and reading the graph back.
Hold markets, bets, notes, and links as a connected map, distill the signal, and turn the thinking into plans and projects on the same board.
If Logseq's bullets and rendered graph never matched how you picture ideas, a canvas where the network is the workspace will feel like the tool you were missing.
COMPARED
Each tool connects notes in its own way. The question is whether you see the network, build in it, and turn it into work.
Recommended
A visual canvas where ideas connect in space
AI that reads the board you are working on
Open-source, local-first note files you own
Notes become storyboards, plans, and projects
A visual canvas where ideas connect in space
AI that reads the board you are working on
Open-source, local-first note files you own
Notes become storyboards, plans, and projects
A visual canvas where ideas connect in space
AI that reads the board you are working on
Open-source, local-first note files you own
Notes become storyboards, plans, and projects
A visual canvas where ideas connect in space
AI that reads the board you are working on
Open-source, local-first note files you own
Notes become storyboards, plans, and projects
Join early creators getting structured workspaces and AI that remembers their projects
“Storyflow has sped up my workflow by at least 3x, which means more flow state and more projects I can actually ship. It truly changed the way me and my team create.”

Reilin Joey
Director & YouTuber
“One prompt gets me a structured board. But the tactics are my favorite. I run my YouTube scripts through them and my intros and retention got better. It's amazing.”

Justkay
YouTuber & Freelance Filmmaker
“I used to juggle five apps to plan a project. Now I describe what I am making and get boards, lists, and a schedule. All in one place.”

George
@fernwehchronicles
Everything people ask when comparing Storyflow with Logseq.
It depends on what you want from networked notes. If you want linked notes but built on a visual canvas where ideas connect in space, with an AI that reads your board and notes that turn into storyboards and plans, Storyflow is a strong fit. It keeps Logseq's idea of ideas linked to ideas, and makes the network something you see and build in rather than a graph rendered from bullets. If open-source, local-first storage is what you care about most, Logseq itself is hard to beat.
Capture your notes on a canvas, connect them in space, and turn the best cluster into a plan. Free plan, no credit card.