▲ 4 r/RenoiseAI+2 crossposts

Me and my Maserati 🤝 (AI said yes when my wallet said absolutely not)

Finally got my dream car. No financing, no insurance, no problems. LOL

u/WeaknessLopsided8541 — 24 days ago
▲ 9 r/RenoiseAI+3 crossposts

Gave AI a mood board and reference images for a fashion shoot. I genuinely can't tell it's not real footage anymore.

u/WeaknessLopsided8541 — 26 days ago
▲ 4 r/RenoiseAI+2 crossposts

Made an ice cream video by AI just because it's that kind of summer

Didn't plan this. Just felt like the right energy for the season.

What flavor would you generate first?

u/WeaknessLopsided8541 — 1 month ago
▲ 7 r/RenoiseAI+3 crossposts

Made a tissue box style ad for an AI tool I've been testing — does the vibe land?

Went for that clean product-in-scene aesthetic. All AI generated. Would love to know if it actually feels like a real ad or if something's off.

u/WeaknessLopsided8541 — 1 month ago

Product consistency in AI video

Product consistency that actually holds up across shots with Renoise. No manual keyframing, no inpainting.

Video in comments.

u/WeaknessLopsided8541 — 1 month ago

Tested Creatify, Pika, Luma, OpenArt, and Renoise with real paid plans. Honest impressions after a month.

Paid for all five. Used them for actual ad production, not just fun prompts. Here's what I actually think.

**Creatify:**Fastest from product URL to a batch of ad variants. Good for simple briefs at volume. Credit system is confusing, lip-sync breaks on anything dynamic, and the billing section on G2 is its own horror story.

**Pika:**The most expressive clips when it cooperates. But results are genuinely random — same prompt, same image, different output every time. Hit "High Demand" for 9 hours on a paid plan. Fun to play with, not reliable to depend on.

**Luma AI (Ray3):**Best motion and lighting I've seen from any of these tools. Treats your prompt as a loose suggestion though — asked for a static scene, got a tracking shot of someone walking away from the camera. Beautiful output, low obedience.

**OpenArt:**100+ models in one login — FLUX, Veo 3, Kling — without juggling five subscriptions. Genuinely useful for experimenting. Gets complex fast, and you won't know the credit cost of anything until you're already at checkout.

**Renoise:**The one that surprised me most. Where every other tool gives you a clip and sends you back to Premiere, Renoise is built around finishing the whole ad production loop — brief, generate, variant, done. Conversational interface means you're describing what you want instead of hunting buttons. And the character consistency (FacePass) actually holds up across multiple assets, which is the thing I kept hitting walls on everywhere else. If your end goal is ad creatives, not just clips, it's the only one here that's actually designed for that job.

reddit.com
u/WeaknessLopsided8541 — 1 month ago
▲ 6 r/u_WeaknessLopsided8541+3 crossposts

Just wrapped this short film experiment. Spent only a couple minutes generating the visuals, and I’m honestly really happy with the cinematography and overall mood.

My biggest issue right now is the voiceover — it still feels a bit robotic and emotionally flat, more like “reading lines” than a real cinematic performance. I want it to feel more natural, subtle, and emotionally connected to the visuals like a mature animated short film.

For people doing AI filmmaking / AI storytelling:
What prompts or techniques are you using to get more emotional and cinematic narration from AI voice tools? Things like:

  • pacing prompts?
  • whisper / breath control?
  • emotional tone keywords?

Would love any advice, prompt examples, or brutal feedback 🙏

u/WeaknessLopsided8541 — 2 months ago