By 2026, the global media environment is shaped by generative content systems, accelerated production cycles, and increasingly fragmented audience attention. Under these conditions, the traditional reliance on authorial intuition—long regarded as the primary driver of visual storytelling—faces a structural crisis of effectiveness. While intuition remains an essential creative impulse, it no longer provides sufficient reliability, scalability, or semantic accountability in high-stakes media contexts. This article proposes a transition toward Structured Narrative Engineering, in which visual language is examined as a system of controllable parameters, including semantic hierarchy, cognitive load, and perceptual focus. By integrating intuitive impulses into reproducible visual logic, directors can maintain narrative coherence and authorial identity across complex, hybrid media ecosystems. The study draws on applied professional systems such as Creative Management Systems and Visual Storytelling Algorithms to demonstrate how structured approaches support clarity, consistency, and trust in contemporary visual communication.
Andriy Shvydkyy (Thu,) studied this question.