Lynx AI Video Generator
Lynx AI Video Model with modern motion planning, clean composition, and creator‑friendly output choices across 16:9, 9:16, and 1:1.
Key Features
Image‑to‑Video (I2V‑only) with clean motion planning
Creator‑friendly outputs across 16:9, 9:16, and 1:1
Strong prompt adherence for camera and subject choreography
Stable identity in I2V with consistent palette and lighting
Practical durations for editorial assembly (5–10s)
Works well for explainers, promos, product/UI shots, and teasers
Prompting Best Practices for Lynx
- Step 1
Separate subject, camera, and environment
Define subject action (‘turns, nods, steps’), camera path (‘slow push‑in’, ‘orbit 30°’), and environment cues (‘rain mist, soft haze’). Layered prompts reduce ambiguity.
- Step 2
Lock a lighting and color vibe
Short anchors—‘studio key with soft rim’, ‘golden hour’, ‘neon magenta/cyan’—keep palette steady across frames.
- Step 3
Use concise verbs
Prefer precise actions (tilt, pan, dolly, orbit) over vague terms. Clear verbs yield cleaner motion and fewer artifacts.
- Step 4
Draft short, then extend
Validate composition and pacing with 5–6s drafts. Extend once the look and motion read well.
- Step 5
Keep vertical framing readable
For 9:16, center the subject, use medium framing, and avoid excessive parallax that competes with captions.
Example Prompts
I2V: Studio product shot (start frame); matte black smartwatch on linen; soft sweep studio lighting; slow orbit; crisp edges; 6s; 16:9
I2V: City night portrait (start frame); neon alley; camera tracks left; puddle reflections shimmer; subtle handheld; 8s; 16:9
I2V: Presenter portrait (start frame); friendly talking head; gentle push‑in; clean studio key; 9:16 vertical; 7s
I2V: Logo plate (start frame); elegant reveal with parallax particles; soft glow; 5s; 1:1
I2V: Fantasy teaser frame (start frame); cloak lifts in breeze; camera arcs clockwise; volumetric fog; warm rim light; 8s; 16:9
💡 Click the copy button to use these prompts in your own generations
Model Capabilities
Strengths & Limitations
Strengths
- Strong prompt adherence for camera/subject motion
- Clean composition and balanced palette
- Friendly outputs for 9:16, 1:1, 16:9
- Good identity retention from single start frames
- Efficient for explainers, promos, and product/UI shots
Limitations
- Highly complex multi‑subject action may require iteration
- Very long single‑take scenes are better as multiple clips
Where Lynx Excels
Explainers & Talking Heads
Presenter clips with clean studio lighting, subtle camera motion, and caption‑friendly framing for vertical or landscape feeds.
Product & UI Promos
Slow arcs, push‑ins, and measured pans that highlight materials and layouts without distraction.
Teasers & Announcements
Short, cinematic beats with clear silhouettes, controlled parallax, and a consistent palette.
Logo & Title Reveals
Elegant plate and emblem treatments with soft glow, particles, and gentle motion paths.
Lifestyle B‑roll
Quiet camera language—tracking, gentle tilt—paired with environmental cues (mist, rain) for premium coverage.
About Lynx
Lynx focuses on clean, readable motion and creator‑ready outputs across common aspect ratios. It responds well to concise, film‑literate prompts—subject, lens/shot, camera move, lighting, and palette—producing short clips that assemble easily into polished sequences.
Prompting Approach
Start with the action beat, define the camera path, and anchor lighting and color in a single sentence each. Keep negatives minimal, and iterate with 5–6s drafts before extending.
Editorial Workflow
Treat each clip like a shot. Generate multiple angles or variants, then assemble using gentle sound design and consistent grading. This yields cleaner results than attempting one long take.
Lynx vs Other Video Models
Pixverse V5
- Pixverse V5 emphasizes cinematic texture and dynamic visuals (including T2V); Lynx is I2V‑only with readable motion and creator‑friendly outputs.
- For high‑impact, stylized T2V scenes, Pixverse; for clean I2V explainers and product/UI shots, Lynx.
- Pick by art direction and target platforms—long‑form texture vs short, editorial clarity.
- Iterate short drafts on both to validate pacing before finals.
- Choose by texture ‘wow’ vs. I2V editorial clarity.
Wan 2.5
- Wan 2.5 offers T2V/I2V with one‑pass VO alignment and multilingual prompts; Lynx is I2V‑only focused on clean motion and composition.
- For voice‑led explainers or localization, Wan 2.5; for silent I2V promos and product/UI shots, Lynx.
- Both deliver social‑ready outputs; pick by audio pipeline.
- Use Wan 2.5 for talking heads; Lynx for supporting visuals.
- Combine in edits for best of both.
Kling 2.5 Turbo Pro
- Kling emphasizes cinematic camera choreography and temporal stability (T2V/I2V); Lynx is I2V‑only with prompt‑driven clarity and creator workflows.
- For hero shots and cinematic reveals (incl. T2V), Kling; for straightforward I2V explainers and promos, Lynx.
- Both respect camera‑move language; keep verbs concise.
- Try the same shot on both to compare feel.
- Choose by camera craft vs. production speed.
Seedance Pro
- Seedance Pro specializes in body/gesture nuance; Lynx focuses on clean composition and measured motion.
- For choreography‑centric clips, Seedance; for product, UI, and presenter edits, Lynx.
- Both benefit from 5–10s takes; assemble multiple shots.
- Pick by performance nuance vs. editorial clarity.
- Combine across campaigns.
Hailou 02 Pro
- Hailou 02 Pro leans into photoreal detail and in‑frame text fidelity (incl. T2V); Lynx leans into clean I2V motion language and creator ease.
- For signage or text‑accented shots, Hailou; for simple, caption‑friendly I2V explainers, Lynx.
- Both support I2V starts; use sharp references.
- Pick by typography needs vs. editorial speed.
- Mix in the same edit for variety.