The Veo 3.1 AI video generator turns a text prompt or a single photo into a short cinematic clip with smooth, natural motion.
Run Veo 3.1 online on Zorq AI — no install. Free credits on signup.

Customer Value
A sleek car commercial, glossy reflections, slow reveal.
A text-to-video and image-to-video model for cinematic, coherent short clips.
Describe a scene in a prompt and the model renders it as a short clip. Detailed prompts covering subject, camera move, and mood give the most cinematic results. You can steer the result by naming the genre and reference look you have in mind, and the model will bias the framing and grade toward it while keeping the motion smooth.
Upload a single still and the model animates it, keeping your subject and composition while adding natural motion. Ideal when you already have the frame you want.
Tuned for smooth camera movement and believable physics, so clips read as filmed footage rather than a warped animation.
Holds a subject and style across a short clip, which is what makes it useful for montages and mini short-films rather than one-second loops.
A short clip generates in about a minute, so you can iterate on prompt and framing cheaply before committing to a longer or higher-resolution take.
No install, no GPU, nothing to set up — open the video generator, pick the model, and create straight from the browser on desktop or phone.
per short clip
~1 min
both inputs supported
Text + image
motion quality
Cinematic
credits on signup
Free
Common questions about using this model on Zorq AI.
Veo 3.1 is an AI video model that generates short cinematic clips from a text prompt or a single image. On Zorq AI you can run it online with no local setup.
You get free credits on signup, enough to test video generation before buying more. Ongoing use runs on credits based on clip length and resolution, not a subscription lock-in.
Both. Start from a written prompt for a brand-new scene, or upload a photo to animate an existing frame. Image input keeps your subject consistent; a prompt gives more creative range.
About a minute for a short clip, depending on length, resolution, and current load. Shorter, lower-resolution drafts are fastest and cheapest for iterating on an idea.
Direct it like a shot. Specify the camera move, the lighting, and the pace, plus one clear subject and action. Over-loaded prompts with several competing ideas are the main cause of warped output.
Yes. A frame made with any image generator works as a starting image, and the motion keeps the same colors, composition, and style you designed in the source frame.
Yes on paid Zorq AI plans — clips are intended for creator content, ads, and client work, subject to the content policy. Get permission when a clip features a real person or a client's product.
No. Everything runs in the cloud, so any modern phone or laptop works. There is nothing to install and no local render time; you upload or type, wait about a minute, and download the file.
Download the finished MP4 and upload it like any other video. Start from a portrait prompt or photo so the output fits a 9:16 feed, then add a trending sound in your editor.
Usually the input, not the tool. A blurry source frame or a prompt asking for too much at once gives the model little to hold onto. Start from a sharp image and one clear motion instruction.
Clips export as standard MP4 files that play everywhere and upload straight to social or a website with no conversion. The output keeps the aspect ratio of your prompt or source frame.
Veo 3.1 offers standard short-form resolutions up to high definition, with higher resolutions costing more credits per clip. A practical workflow is to draft at a lower resolution to lock the motion and framing, then regenerate the winner at the highest resolution for delivery.
Yes — it is one of the stronger models for photoreal camera movement and lighting, which is why it suits product shots, establishing scenes, and cinematic b-roll. Stylized or animated looks are also possible by describing the style directly in the prompt.
Detailed but focused. One subject, one clear action, and a described camera move and lighting beat a long list of competing ideas. Think of it as a single shot description rather than a whole scene with multiple events.
Yes, through the prompt. Ask for a slow push-in, an aerial pass, a handheld follow, or a static locked-off frame, and the model will bias toward that motion. Naming the camera move is one of the highest-impact things you can write.
Short social clips, product teasers, mood films, animated concepts, and cinematic b-roll for longer edits. Because a clip renders in about a minute, it is fast enough to test several creative directions before choosing one to finish.
Audio support depends on the selected mode; when it is off, export the silent clip and add a soundtrack or voiceover in your editor. For most social edits, dropping the clip onto a trending sound after download is the fastest route and gives you full control over the audio.
Type a prompt or upload a photo and get a cinematic clip in about a minute. Free credits on signup. Start with a clear, well-lit image or a specific scene prompt for the cleanest result, then regenerate at a higher resolution once the motion looks right. Most creators start with a quick low-resolution draft to check the motion, then regenerate the best take at full resolution for the final export.