Two ways to make a video
Describe the scene — "waves crashing on a black sand beach at dusk" — and the AI renders it as a moving clip.
Upload a still image (or use one you generated here) and the AI animates it into motion — see the image to video generator.
Render a quick preview in roughly a third of the time, iterate on the idea, then do the full-quality render once it's right.
Add an AI-generated music bed to your clip on the same page — no separate editor needed.
How it works
- Describe or upload. Type the scene you want, or switch to image-to-video and drop in a picture.
- Draft it. Use fast-draft to preview the motion cheaply, and refine your prompt.
- Render and download. Run the full-quality render, optionally add music, download the MP4.
Is it free? The honest answer
A free account includes 1 five-second video per week — a real render, not a locked preview. Paid plans (from $4.99/mo — see pricing) add more clips per week and longer durations of 8-12 seconds. We won't pretend video is limitless: it burns far more GPU time than images, and "free unlimited AI video" claims elsewhere always hide a catch.
What you can do free: generate images at no cost (2 a day, no account) to test quality and build the stills you might animate later, and try the free AI chat to script your video first.
What people make with it
- Short clips for TikTok, Reels and YouTube Shorts
- B-roll and atmosphere shots for narrated videos
- Animated versions of AI art and photos
- Story and lore videos — pair it with Stories for the script and Music for the soundtrack