Use Kling 3.0 on VibeVideo with a prompt framework inspired by official release notes and fal's prompting guide.
These examples mirror Kling 3.0 release-note style cases. Keep structure, camera language, and pacing explicit.

A knight in full armor rides a white horse, sword raised, through a dramatic, motion-blurred landscape with fiery orange and dark, cloudy skies.
Mode-aware prompting and structured instructions produce more stable professional output.
A practical prompt loop adapted from Kling prompting best practices.
Match your goal first: text-to-video for idea-first creation, image-to-video for motion choreography.
Write subject and action first, then add environment, camera movement, timing words, and style cues.
For transform/edit scenarios, explicitly state what should stay unchanged to reduce drift.
Adjust one variable per run (camera, pacing, or style) for faster convergence on your target output.
Representative scenarios inspired by Kling 3.0 release-note examples.
Prompt includes speaker order, tone, and room ambience for natural story flow.
A prompt-first workflow reduces guesswork and improves output consistency.
The subject-motion-camera-style structure gave us repeatable outputs with less trial and error.
Creative Producer
Campaign Team
Mode-specific prompting helped our team switch between narrative scenes and edit tasks without losing consistency.
Video Strategist
Brand Studio
We adapted multilingual dialogue prompts and kept visual identity stable across regional variations.
Localization Lead
Growth Team
Practical answers for teams using Kling 3.0 through VibeVideo.
Need implementation help? Contact support@vibevideo.app
Turn prompt strategy into production-ready video output with a faster iteration loop.