Home
Discover
Premiums
Generate AI Video
Contest
Upload
Profile
Prefs
Theme
Top Accounts
Top Videos
English
About
Feedback
Support
T&C
Privacy
DMCA
© 2026 HUGE.com
Filters
Sign Up
Log In
AI Video Generator
Browse AI Generated Videos
Videos
all
by ai model
AI Models
Kling 2.5 Turbo (pro):
Generate a character Neo from the Matrix holding a Nokia 7110 phone in one hand and showing a dislike with the other hand
Sora 2:
POV first-person perspective of a young adult experiencing the consequences of an unhealthy lifestyle. The scene begins in the morning: the person wakes up feeling exhausted, head heavy, eyes tired, messy room, empty fast-food packages around. The camera (their eyes) looks into the mirror — pale skin, dark circles, low energy. Breathing is slightly heavy. Cut to daily routine from first-person view: skipping breakfast or eating junk food, drinking soda instead of water, sitting for long hours at a desk, scrolling on a phone late at night. Show physical discomfort — headaches, low energy, shortness of breath when walking up stairs, lack of motivation. Use realistic lighting, natural sounds (alarm clock, city noise, phone notifications), and subtle emotional background music that feels heavy and reflective. Include moments of internal struggle: looking at healthy people outside, feeling regret, trying to move but feeling weak and unmotivated. Emphasize emotional tone: fatigue, frustration, quiet sadness, and awareness of consequences. End the video with a reflective pause: the person sits down, looks at their hands or reflection again, breathing slowly — suggesting realization and the need for change. Style: cinematic realism, immersive POV, handheld camera feeling, high detail, soft color grading slightly desaturated to emphasize mood.
PixVerse v5:
[Hook – 0:00–0:20] Let me ask you something. Why do so many talented artists fail on YouTube… even when their drawings are amazing? It’s not because they lack talent. It’s because they lack consistency. [The Problem – 0:20–1:00] Every artist has a dream. “To become famous.” “To get respect for my art.” “To receive client orders.” But here’s what really happens. We upload two or three videos. Views are low. Motivation drops. Then comparison starts. “He got 1 million views.” “I can’t even get 100.” And that’s where most artists quit. [The Truth – 1:00–1:40] YouTube is not a talent competition. It’s a patience competition. The algorithm is not your enemy. It’s a test. If you keep posting… If you keep improving… It cannot ignore you forever. [The Shift – 1:40–2:20] Do you know how big artists grow? Daily practice. Daily posting. Learning from mistakes. They didn’t wait for perfect videos. They posted progress. Perfection kills growth. Consistency builds empires. [Emotional Build – 2:20–3:00] Imagine this. One day, your channel reaches 100,000 subscribers. People comment: “Your drawings inspire me.” “I started art because of you.” For that future… Can you handle today’s struggle? [Call to Action – 3:00–End] If you are a real artist… You don’t quit. Create something today. Post something today. No views? It’s okay. Slow growth is still growth. Remember this: Talent makes you good. Consistency makes you unforgettable.
Sora 2:
Create a 30–40 second aesthetic lifestyle video titled “My day — healthy day”. Simple, natural, soft lighting. No face shown — only hands, back view, or action shots. Scenes: – Morning: drinking water and healthy breakfast (yogurt, fruits). – Light stretching or workout at home. – Short walk outside in daylight. – Evening journaling or tea time. Style: clean, cozy, natural colors, smooth simple transitions. Add short text captions: “Morning” “Move” “Fresh air” “Relax” HD quality, simple editing, realistic, soft background music.
Sora 2:
Cinematic close-up of a sophisticated golden retriever wearing a tuxedo and spectacles, intensely typing on a glowing laptop in a dark office. Suddenly, a squirrel scurries across the screen; the dog’s eyes go wide, his tongue flops out, and he frantically begins "digging" into the keyboard, sending keys flying.
Kling 2.5 Turbo (pro):
French kiss
Kling 2.5 Turbo (pro):
The city lights flickered as a strange energy wave spread across the sky. People stopped and stared. Suddenly, a portal opened, and Doraemon stepped out, holding his mysterious gadget pouch. He looked confused — this wasn’t the future he knew. At the center of the city stood Gojo, calm and smiling, sensing a powerful disturbance. “You don’t belong here,” he said, adjusting his blindfold. Doraemon nervously replied, “I’m just trying to fix a time error!” But before he could explain, a burst of cursed energy exploded around them. Gojo activated his Infinity, creating an invisible barrier no one could cross. Doraemon realized talking wouldn’t stop the chaos. He pulled out a gadget — the Space Cutter — and launched a glowing slash toward Gojo. The attack moved fast, slicing through buildings, but slowed as it reached Infinity. Gojo smirked. “Interesting… but not enough.” Gojo countered with a powerful energy blast. Doraemon quickly used a Time Freeze gadget, stopping everything for a moment. Even Gojo felt the strange effect and raised an eyebrow. “A gadget that bends time… impressive.” The battle escalated. Gadgets flew everywhere — portals, shields, gravity switches — while Gojo’s limitless power bent space itself. The sky lit up with blue and red energy as their abilities clashed. Finally, Doraemon used his last gadget — a Friendship Bell that calmed hostile energy. The battlefield became silent. Gojo lowered his hand and laughed softly. “You’re not here to fight… you’re here to protect.” Doraemon nodded. The portal reopened. Before leaving, Gojo said, “If we meet again, let’s fight as friends.” Doraemon smiled, stepped into the portal, and the city returned to normal — as if nothing had happened.
Kling 2.5 Turbo (pro):
Make ot live
Kling 2.5 Turbo (pro):
Make it live quite solana graphic and lukso network
Sora 2:
dancing bear
Wan 2.5 Preview:
All cars working
Sora 2:
Ultra-realistic cinematic construction documentary in one continuous 30-second shot. Scene: a tight small urban construction lot between two buildings, concrete ground, safety barriers, stacked materials neatly on the right side (cinder blocks, wooden planks, rebar bundle, cement bags). Overcast daylight, soft shadows, consistent exposure, no flicker. Camera: fixed tripod, same height and angle for the entire clip, 35mm look, shallow depth of field, stable framing, no zoom, no sudden camera movement. Workers: exactly 4 workers, consistent throughout, wearing identical PPE: yellow hard hats, orange reflective vests, grey work pants, gloves, face masks. No readable logos. Faces not visible. No new workers appear. Action progression (smooth and believable, no jump cuts): First 5 seconds: workers mark a rectangular footprint using string line and chalk, measuring carefully. 5–10 seconds: shallow excavation begins inside the rectangle, soil moved neatly to the left, wheelbarrow used slowly. 10–15 seconds: wooden formwork installed and rebar grid laid inside, workers tie rebar and check level. 15–20 seconds: concrete is poured carefully into the formwork, workers level and smooth it with screed and trowels. 20–25 seconds: walls rise quickly but realistically using concrete blocks and mortar, doorway opening forms, roof beams placed. 25–30 seconds: finished micro-structure is complete with clean exterior, door installed, site cleaned, barriers removed, workers step back to admire the final result. Everything must remain physically consistent: tools do not morph, materials remain the same, workers do not duplicate, no extra limbs, no teleporting objects. No warping, no melting, no surreal motion. No text, no subtitles, no watermark.
Kling 1.0 (standard):
a static picture, the bubbles in the picture move and burst when the bottle of lipstick rises and falls into a pink spray
Kling 1.0 (standard):
a static picture, the bubbles in the picture move and burst when the bottle of lipstick rises and falls into a pink spray
Sora 2:
Opening shot: Early morning light through blinds. Dust particles floating in the air. Silence. Close-up of a shipping box being cut open. Slow. Careful. The older gentleman (late 60s / early 70s) gently lifts out a brushed-metal amplifier. It has that classic weight. He runs his hand across the faceplate. No dialogue. Just room tone. He places each component into a rack — deliberate, practiced movements. You can tell… this isn’t his first system. Close-ups: Speaker binding posts tightening. Turntable platter lowering into place. The soft click of RCA cables seating. His wedding ring catching light as he adjusts a knob. He sits back. One breath. He presses the power button. The relays click on. Meters glow. VU needles wake up. The second the power light comes on — The room shifts. Warm analog hiss fades in. A subtle 70s-style guitar chord begins. 🎞 The Flashbacks Instead of cheesy obvious flashbacks — we do emotional flashes. Quick, soft-cut memories: Him as a young man in the 70s turning up a silver receiver. A basement party, lava lamps glowing. A young woman (his future wife) laughing as a record spins. A concert crowd bathed in amber light. Him carefully dropping a needle on vinyl in 1982. Back to present. The music swells. His eyes close. He smiles — not big, not forced — just that quiet “I remember this feeling” smile. Final Shot Camera pulls back slowly. The room now glows warm from the equipment lights. Modern design. Vintage soul. Cut to black. Then: CROWNFIELD AUDIO Where modern power meets vintage soul. Soft relay click sound. End.
«
352
353
354
355
356
»
You need to enable JavaScript.