Next-Gen AI Video & AI Image Generator
Officially branded as Kling AI, this is Kuaishou Technology's AI video generation product for creating and editing video with multimodal inputs and outputs.
A Freepik Spaces workflow replaces 3x3 boards with 2x2 cinematic grids, then splits each panel into four Kling 3.0 Omni reference stills. The layout matches 10-second caps and the creator claims it cuts generation spend by up to 50%.
Zopia lets creators start from an idea, script or images, pick a video model, then auto-generate characters, storyboards, clips and 4K exports. More of the film pipeline is bundled into one app.
A Freepik Spaces walkthrough shows how creators are combining camera-shot footage, Nano Banana 2 images and Kling Motion Control in one music-video pipeline. Use it when you want stylized performance pieces without juggling as many separate tools.
A new shared Space shows how to build a music video inside Freepik using Nano Banana shot grids, OmniHuman or Veed Fabric for lipsync, and Kling 3.0 for motion. The pipeline is now reusable instead of scattered across separate tutorials and tools, so teams can follow one workflow.
A Freepik Spaces workflow now uses Nano Banana 2 for stills, Veed Fabric for closeup lipsync, OmniHuman for directed performance, and Kling 3.0 for motion clips. Split one music video into model-specific stages instead of forcing a single tool to handle everything.
Creators are using Seedance 2 for fighting-game motion, classic-animation looks, cosmic shorts, anime-noir set pieces, horror tests, and ASCII experiments. Reuse a strong prompt structure across scenes, then mix in Midjourney or Kling only when a shot needs a different finish.
Adobe Firefly now runs Kling 2.5 Turbo inside Firefly and Firefly Boards, and creators quickly posted first tests from the integrated workflow. It keeps image, video, and audio work in one Adobe stack instead of hopping between apps.
A filmmaker shared a seven-step pipeline that uses Gemini for research, Nano Banana Pro for consistent scenes, Kling for image-to-video, Veo for speaking shots, and CapCut for finish. The sequence is useful if you want research, references, motion, and sound separated into controllable stages.
Creators are using Kling 3.0 for anime tests, multi-scene clips in ComfyUI, and Hedra-driven reference generation with Motion Control. Try it when you need continuity across beats instead of separate one-off animations.
Shared workflows show creators generating flat art with Niji or Midjourney, converting it into polished 3D with Nano Banana 2, then passing frames to Kling for motion. Use it to lock style and composition before animation.
Pexo went live on ClawHub as an OpenClaw skill that builds complete videos inside chat, asking clarifying questions and auto-selecting models scene by scene. It matters if you want ads or explainers without opening a separate editor, but review the storyboard before posting.
Recap David shared a one-photo renovation workflow that reverse-engineers build stages, animates them with Kling, and adds music for about $10 in credits. It matters for real-estate and landscaping creatives who need portfolio-style ads without filming the actual build.
Freepik published a music-video template in Spaces using Nano Banana 2, Fabric 1.0 lip sync, and Kling 3.0 Motion Control, while creators also tested Speak on sung audio. Use the node recipe for fast mockups, but keep faces visible and front-facing to avoid broken sync.
Creators are getting usable Kling 3.0 clips from short prompt formulas, while tutorials focus on keeping two characters in the same controlled scene. If long prompt blocks are failing, test simpler shot descriptions and motion-control setups first.
Kling rolled out a Team Plan on desktop and web with shared spaces, collaboration tools, and commercial-use permissions. Use it to centralize prompts, assets, and review loops instead of passing projects around manually.
A creator claims Calico can turn listing photos into $15 renovation reels, alongside AI ad formats like fake podcast clips, styled product grids, and surreal brand posters. Use the approach when you need many low-cost variations built from one repeatable concept.
A shared Freepik Space turns four text inputs into a logo, button system, UI kit, and looping animation, with adjacent one-image-to-website demos on phone. Duplicate the Space if you want a faster brand prototype pipeline.
BeatBandit added a full NLE editor so scripts, shot lists, character setup, video generation, and editing can stay in one app. MultiShotMaster also arrived in-browser with 1-to-5-shot generation and node-graph chaining, so test both if you want faster narrative iteration.
Creators showed Kling 3.0 turning sketches into motion, animating ogres and monster fights, and looping branded UI scenes inside node workflows. Try it as a bridge from rough boards to presentable motion tests.
Creators report Kling 3.0 can turn still monitors into portal handshakes, desk fights, and morph-driven scenes, including inside Leonardo. Lock composition and set clear start and end frames if you want cleaner reality-break shots.
Stages AI previewed a patent-pending bridge editing system that links shots by motion, color, subject continuity, and screen direction instead of standard transitions. Watch it if you care about AI-native editing tools, not just generation.
Creator tests show Kling 3.0 handling four-character fight scenes, plus dragon-siege shots, music videos, and ad cuts with many angles. Try it for longer sequence work, but plan for heavy iteration and cleanup before final edit.
A creator shared a Freepik Spaces workflow that starts with a Nano Banana character, turns poses into motion clips, and exports spritesheets through a custom app. Use it to prototype game animation sets faster than drawing every frame by hand.
Kling launched a Motion Control 3.0 prize challenge offering $30,000 and 300M credits, while creators shared trailer, horror, and multi-shot examples. Test motion with cheaper passes first, then move to higher-control setups for final sequences.
Hedra introduced Agent as a guided visual creation workflow, and creators are already using it to turn reference packs into coordinated fashion campaign assets. Try it if you want one conversational workspace for variations, shot ideas, and image-to-video expansion.
Kling 3.0 creators showed tighter results for boxing, spaceship fly-bys, horror beats, and POV sequences built from linked stills. Try these workflows if you want repeatable genre-specific shot design instead of one-off clips.
a16z published its sixth consumer AI ranking and expanded the methodology to include AI-powered products such as Canva, Freepik, CapCut, Notion, Picsart, and Grammarly. Watch bundled AI features inside mainstream products as standalone image and video categories get tighter.
Creators shared repeatable Kling 3.0 prompts for glowing fantasy reveals, sci-fi trailers, horror ceiling shots, and slow rotations around isometric office dioramas. Use short, scene-specific prompts when you need controlled motion instead of vague cinematic phrasing.
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.