Freepik adds Kling 3.0 Motion Control: video references, 30s clips, unlimited promo to March 16
Freepik rolled out Kling 3.0 Motion Control in Pikaso with video-based motion reference, 30-second clips, and a temporary unlimited-use offer for higher tiers through March 16. Try it for repeatable motion and looping workflows without leaving one platform.

TL;DR
- Freepik has added Kling 3.0 Motion Control to Pikaso, and the core pitch in Freepik's launch post is video-to-video motion reference: you can feed in any video and keep gestures and facial expressions consistent.
- The same launch thread says clips can run up to 30 seconds, while the product link post points creators straight to the Kling Motion Control tool inside Freepik.
- Early demos suggest the practical use case is controlled repetition rather than one-off spectacle: in techhalla's lofi workflow, a still image is generated, upscaled, and turned into a loop using Kling inside the same platform.
- Freepik is also pushing the rollout aggressively: according to the announcement, Premium+ and Pro users get unlimited access until March 16.
What shipped
Freepik's launch post frames Kling 3.0 Motion Control as “full motion control” inside Pikaso. The concrete new pieces are simple: use a video as the motion reference, preserve gestures and expressions from that reference, and render clips up to 30 seconds long. The companion tool link post routes users directly to the Kling Motion Control page in Freepik's video generator at the Pikaso tool.
This matters less as a headline feature list than as a workflow change. Instead of prompting motion from scratch, creators can now treat an existing performance or camera move as the template and swap the visual layer on top. Freepik also attached a time-limited pricing hook: the same announcement says Premium+ and Pro subscribers have unlimited use until March 16.
What creators are already doing with it
The fastest creator takeaway is that Kling's motion control fits neatly into short-form looping workflows. In techhalla's demo, the process is deliberately lightweight: generate a lofi still with Z-Image, upscale it, then animate it into a loop inside Freepik. The thread says the trick is to reuse the same image as both the start and end frame for a clean 15-second closure, which turns a static scene into a repeatable music-video backdrop rather than a one-off shot.
A second example shows the other end of the spectrum. In the Shibuya demo, Kling 3.0 Motion Control drives a smooth orbit and zoom across a stylized extraction of Tokyo's Scramble Crossing, emphasizing camera choreography and output resolution; the post explicitly calls out 1080p quality. Taken together, the two demos sketch the current creative range: simple atmospheric loops for music and study content, or more elaborate camera-driven moves over designed environments.
The common thread is control. Freepik is packaging image generation, upscaling, and Kling animation in one place, so the practical win is less about a brand-new aesthetic and more about keeping a motion reference intact while iterating on style and scene design.