VeoGoogle flagship video generation model

Veo

A next-generation model built for stronger temporal coherence, more faithful physics and materials, and prompts that read like a shot list—great for promos, previz, and premium b-roll.

High-fidelity imageryReadable camera grammarBelievable physics

Veo shot lab

Create short videos fast for your social channels.

Prompt

Model

Veo3.1 Fast

Beeldverhouding

  • Liggend 16:9
  • Staand 9:16
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Veo 3.1

Video meets audio and longer beats

For filmmakers and storytellers: steer both picture and sonic atmosphere (ambience, dialogue pacing, and more) so each generation feels like a cut-ready micro-shot before sound design.

Open the LimaxAI video workspace

New capabilities

Greater control, consistency, and creativity—flip through multiple demo clips to feel pacing and light.

Clip 1 of 3

What’s new

Three upgrades: more believable footage, sharper prompt following, and richer creative control.

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Re-designed for greater realism

More believable physics and lighting so materials, fluids, and performance hold up when stakeholders zoom in.

02

Follows prompts like never before

Improved instruction following when you specify lens verbs, rhythm, and hard constraints—fewer blind retries.

03

Improved creative control

From reference composition to style anchors and story beats—generative previz without losing authorship.

Greater control, consistency, and creativity

Demo clips are hosted locally for stable playback; descriptions are LimaxAI-oriented guidance.

Worldbuilding with ambience

Ideal for scenes that need environmental storytelling—forests, wind beds, and distant detail that can extend across cuts.

Dialogue and performance cadence

Write lines and pauses explicitly to steer performance energy—useful for skits, fables, and presenter-style beats.

Light, color, and polish

Smoother shadow roll-off and highlight texture for brand films and travel-grade cinematography.

How to write clearer video prompts

Say what’s in frame, how it should look, and what’s happening—simple, concrete language usually gets you closer to what you picture.

What to include

Add as much or as little as you like; you don’t need everything in one go.

Framing and camera

Wide or close? Locked off, a slow pan, or following someone—a short phrase is enough.

Look and feel

Cartoon, clay stop-motion, film grain, or a clean realistic look—use words you’d use when describing a movie.

Light

Bright or moody, warm or cool, sunlight through a window or neon at night—light sets the mood fast.

People

Age feel, hair, clothes, and expression beat a generic “a person,” and the face on screen tends to feel steadier.

Place

Indoors or out, day or night, busy or empty; a few setting details make the space feel real.

Action

What people are doing and what else is going on—walking, talking, chasing, small hand movements all help the shot find its center.

Dialogue

If you want lines, note who speaks, what they say, and whether the tone is light or serious so picture and sound stay aligned.

Other ways to shape a prompt

Pick one or mix a few—whatever fits your idea.

Lead with the people

Looks, clothes, movement, and lines in one short block make it clear who we’re watching and why.

Set the scene

Light, textures, and the feel of the air—a quiet alley or a busy night market pulls viewers in quickly.

Fast beats

When a lot happens in a few seconds, write it in order: what we see first, what changes next.

Overall tone

Say up front if it should feel playful, serious, or somewhere in between; lines and visuals follow more easily.

Sound and ambience

Rain, footsteps, distant traffic, or room echo—a quick mention often makes audio feel glued to the picture.

A tiny story

No need for a huge plot: a small goal, a bump, and a finish can still feel complete.

Showcase

Multiple ratios and genres to feel how different camera grammars read on a timeline.

Wide cinematic

Establishing space and layered depth.

City portrait

Street texture and crowd rhythm.

Vertical story A

Feed-first framing references.

Vertical story B

Subject-to-environment balance in 9:16.

Polar light

Ice, volumetrics, and wide open space.

Wide sample A

Landscape pacing and light reference.

Model specs

Parameters that line up with post: inputs, resolution, camera control, and aspect presets for edit and delivery.

Model

Veo

Google DeepMind flagship video generation on LimaxAI.

Generation profile

Quality-first pipeline

Tuned for cinematic outputs; wall time varies with length, resolution, and load.

Inputs

Text and/or reference imagery

Drive shots from prompts or guide composition with reference stills.

Output resolution

High-definition video

HD-class exports for review, social, and pitch-ready playback.

Camera control

Multiple cinematic moves

Promptable pans, tilts, dollies, and arcs suited to commercial and narrative blocking.

Aspect ratios

Landscape & portrait

Flexible framing for web hero videos, vertical social, and mixed campaigns.

Cinematic video with native sound

Shape ambience, dialogue, and music in the same prompt so a single clip feels closer to an edited beat.

Themes below reflect common public descriptions of advanced video generation; availability and limits in LimaxAI follow in-product settings.

Sample vibe: medium shot, slow push-in, mural texture, distant city bed, quiet line delivery—like a short passage in a film.

Lock the shot, then layer sound

Say who is on screen, what the place feels like, and how the camera moves. When you want lines or ambience, add a short note on who speaks, what we hear, and the mood—audio tends to track the picture more cleanly.

What people often steer first

Dialogue and ambience

Describe lines, tone, and environmental audio in one block for a fuller first pass.

Guide with reference stills

Use scene or subject references to anchor composition and mood—or to hint at key props and wardrobe.

Style and overall look

From illustrative to cinematic grading, name the aesthetic; pair with a reference when the look must stay fixed.

Steadier characters across cuts

Repeat look and outfit details, or reuse a reference, when the same character should read the same across shots.

Continue the same scene

Keep light and atmosphere aligned while carrying the end of one beat into the next.

Camera motion and clarity

Call out pans, tilts, dollies, or handheld energy; note when you need a closer, steadier read for fine detail.

Write it like a shot list

Lock intent first, add light and texture, export a clip that lands on your timeline.

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Describe scene, mood, and lens

Call out subject, environment, lighting personality, and camera type (slow push, low wide). Add references when composition must stay fixed.

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Pick ratio, duration, and quality

Match the channel, then trade generation cost for stability with the right quality preset.

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Review and export for finishing

Check motion and micro-detail, then export a clean master for color, comp, and sound design.

Who it is for

Creators and teams who want filmic energy and ad-grade clarity without a full capture day.

Film and commercial directors

Previz beats, atmospheric plates, and pickup shots before locking a shoot schedule.

Premium brand marketing

Hero visuals that feel intentional, not generic—great for flagship launches.

High-end creators

Stand out with motion that feels authored, not templated.

Enterprise video teams

Accelerate internal comms, product stories, and executive messaging with repeatable prompts.

FAQ

What kinds of shots is Veo best for?

Veo shines when you need premium imagery, readable camera language, and believable physics—think promos, concept previz, product showcases, and naturalistic effects beats. Capabilities evolve with model versions; run short test prompts before locking a production plan.

How long can clips be?

Duration depends on settings and complexity. Plan each generation as a modular shot you can extend or intercut in post.

How do I steer camera moves?

Describe the move in plain language—slow push-in, handheld walk-and-talk, orbital around a subject—and pair it with lighting and lens cues.

Can I use outputs commercially?

Yes, subject to LimaxAI terms and applicable model policies. Confirm compliance for regulated categories.

How long does generation take?

Typically minutes depending on length and resolution. Queue load can add variability; we keep optimizing throughput.

Video workflow

Expand your lens language with Veo

From a single prompt to a clip you can cut—previz, pickups, and creative validation in one flow.