Use case
The generator workflow is most useful when you already know the scene, camera movement, subject, duration, and output format. Start with a compact prompt, then add lighting, motion, and audio direction only where it improves the result.
Use this page to structure Gemini Omni Video ideas before sending them to the homepage composer. It is built for text-led scenes, reference-driven concepts, product shots, and short cinematic clips.
The generator workflow is most useful when you already know the scene, camera movement, subject, duration, and output format. Start with a compact prompt, then add lighting, motion, and audio direction only where it improves the result.
Quality notes
A short Gemini Omni Video brief should describe one visible moment instead of a full storyboard. Keep the subject, setting, and camera move easy to resolve in a few seconds.
Use one primary movement, such as a slow push-in, turntable rotation, or clean side dolly. Competing camera instructions usually make the prompt harder to interpret.
Mention whether the clip is for a product teaser, social ad, concept scene, or logo reveal. That context helps the prompt prioritize detail and pacing.
Gemini Omni Video Generator
Use these examples as drafting references. They do not trigger generation and they do not claim public availability.
A cinematic 4-second shot of a glass perfume bottle on black stone, slow push-in, soft rim light, clean reflections, premium commercial style.
A vertical teaser of a futuristic sneaker rotating above a wet neon street, energetic camera move, crisp product detail, 4 seconds.
A calm aerial-style reveal of a smart home device on a kitchen counter, morning light, subtle screen glow, realistic motion.
A close-up food video of chocolate sauce pouring over a dessert, slow motion, warm studio lighting, shallow depth of field.
A minimal logo reveal where silver particles assemble into a tech mark on a dark background, smooth camera drift, 4 seconds.
Not publicly yet. The composer is available for prompt preparation and early access capture while live generation remains limited.
Include the subject, setting, visual style, camera movement, duration, aspect ratio, and any audio or ambience direction that matters.
Yes. The examples are written so they can be adapted for text, image reference, or video reference workflows when access opens.