FlashOmni

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Choose a Video Model

Decide whether the task needs speed, image stability, reference control, or editing power first, then choose the matching model to generate.

AI Video Generator

Plan the Shot First, Then Choose the Right Video Model

This page is the video model entry point in FlashOmni. Break a short-film request into subject, action, camera movement, aspect ratio, source images, and reference assets, then choose the model that best fits the current goal instead of sending every video through one generation method.

Omni Flash videoText to videoImage to videoReference asset control
Entry
Video model hub

Compare input methods, speed, and control strength across video models from one page.

Input
Shot brief + assets

Use text to define action and camera; add images and references when subject, product, or style must stay stable.

Output
Short-film candidates

Generate watchable directions first for ads, product showcases, content covers, storyboards, and creative review.

Video Generation Can Start Here

FlashOmni Video works more like a model selection desk: first decide what control the video task needs, then enter the specific model page to generate.

Turn ideas into shots

Break one creative sentence into subject, action, environment, camera movement, rhythm, duration, and ratio to reduce drift.

Bring static images into motion

Start from product images, portraits, poster visuals, or concept art, then add camera push-in, transitions, environmental changes, and motion direction.

Constrain results with references

When character, product, brand style, or composition cannot drift, use reference assets to cover what text cannot describe clearly.

Match models by task

Prioritize speed when exploring directions quickly; choose models with more controls when complex input or editing ability matters.

Keep human review before publishing

Before official use, check motion logic, text, logos, portraits, product details, claims, and rights risks.

Compare versions with history

After saving generated results, review differences between models, prompts, and asset combinations before deciding which version to refine.

Tasks This Video Model Entry Fits

Start from a text shot, source image, or reference asset, make a short-video direction first, then move into finer model parameters and publishing checks.

Generate shot drafts quickly

Turn product openings, ad concepts, storyboard snippets, or background loops into shot briefs and get a watchable motion direction first.

Clarify the use case first

State whether the video is for ads, product pages, social content, demo pages, concept review, or storyboard exploration.

Add motion details

Specify subject action, camera push, speed, lighting, style, duration, and aspect ratio.

Compare model results

The same shot can be tested across models for speed, texture, stability, and prompt following.

Animate images into clips

Use a product image, portrait, poster, or visual concept as the starting point and turn it into a short video.

Lock key visuals

Define what must remain recognizable, such as product outline, character, logo position, composition, or color.

Describe how it changes

Explain how the camera moves, how the subject moves, whether the background changes, and whether the rhythm should be restrained or strong.

Switch models when needed

If the subject drifts or the motion is not right, adjust assets, prompts, or choose a model better suited to image-to-video.

Prepare marketing and content shorts

Create short-video candidates for ads, landing pages, product pages, content feeds, PPT, and internal creative review.

Match the channel first

Choose landscape, portrait, square, or story specs based on placement to avoid heavy cropping later.

Choose a model by control needs

Select a model based on asset input, shot stability, style, generation speed, cost, and editing support.

Check risks before launch

Review asset rights, portraits, claims, text, logos, brand rules, and platform requirements.

How To Choose an AI Video Model

01

Identify the input source first

Decide whether the task starts from text, an image, reference assets, or existing video editing.

02

Specify shot and constraints

Describe subject, action, camera, environment, style, ratio, duration, asset constraints, and elements that cannot change.

03

Compare after generation and iterate

Compare motion, subject stability, image texture, and publishing fit, then switch model, assets, or prompt as needed.

AI Video Generator FAQ

What is this video entry for?

It helps you choose a video generation model in FlashOmni and enter the matching video generation path based on text, images, references, or editing needs.

Does it support text-to-video and image-to-video?

Yes. Specific capabilities depend on the selected model; some models fit text shots better, while others are better for starting from images or references.

What should a video prompt include?

Write subject, action, camera movement, scene, lighting, style, rhythm, duration, ratio, and final use. When using source assets, also state what must remain consistent.

Which video model should I choose first?

If you want to test video directions quickly around Omni Flash, start with Omni Flash. If you need different speed, reference control, or editing ability, compare Seedance 2.0, Wan 2.7, and other models.

Can AI video be used commercially right away?

Commercial use depends on platform terms, input assets, and rights context. Before publishing, check trademarks, logos, portraits, copyrighted references, regulated claims, and target platform rules.

Start Planning Your AI Video

Write the shot goal, add images or references, choose the right video model, and generate drafts for ads, product showcases, content shorts, and creative review.

Shot brief StartImages / references Assets