Use case
Use this page when you want video-specific prompt ideas instead of generic text prompts. The examples focus on motion, framing, lighting, and timing while keeping generation access clearly limited.
Gemini Omni video prompts should read like short production notes: one scene, one main subject, one camera movement, and a clear output context.
Use this page when you want video-specific prompt ideas instead of generic text prompts. The examples focus on motion, framing, lighting, and timing while keeping generation access clearly limited.
Quality notes
A video prompt needs visible change. Describe what moves, how the camera travels, and what the viewer should notice by the end of the clip.
Short clips work better when the action fits the duration. Use a compact reveal, turn, pour, drift, or transformation instead of a multi-scene sequence.
Mention vertical social, website hero, product demo, ad teaser, or cinematic concept so the prompt can align framing and pacing with the intended use.
Gemini Omni video prompts
Use these examples as drafting references. They do not trigger generation and they do not claim public availability.
A 4-second vertical product reveal of a translucent speaker on a glossy table, bass pulse visible through soft light waves, slow push-in, clean tech ad look.
A cinematic shot of a city tram passing through rainy neon reflections, gentle handheld motion, moody night lighting, realistic atmosphere.
A skincare jar opens on marble as a ribbon of light circles the lid, macro detail, soft pink highlights, premium beauty commercial style.
A miniature delivery robot rolls across a kitchen counter carrying a tiny package, playful camera track, warm morning light, 4 seconds.
A logo mark forms from thin glass shards in a dark studio, precise reflections, slow orbit, minimal brand reveal.
A travel backpack lands on a train seat, zipper glints, window light sweeps across fabric texture, lifestyle product teaser.
They include motion, camera behavior, duration, framing, and visible scene progression instead of only describing a static image.
Yes. The composer supports prompt drafting and early access signup, but it does not enable public generation today.
Only include audio when it helps the concept. Many product or cinematic prompts work best with visual direction first.