Venice.AI just added something exciting that people have been waiting for for a very long time: video generation.
And not the lame, fake “coming soon” or “wait list” kind. It’s already live for all users as of October 20, 2025.
Let’s party.
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The Most Requested Venice Feature Ever
Video generation has been Venice’s most requested feature since forever. The team finally delivered, and it’s worth the wait. You can now create full-on motion clips straight from text or images. Both text-to-video and image-to-video are available at launch.
It’s still very new, so there may be some bugs here and there, but I barely experienced any. Also, I tested it for hours, and it didn’t crash once. It was very stable.
There’s also a handy “Copy Last Frame and Continue” button that lets you extend your clip seamlessly. It keeps your last frame rolling into the next one without restarting. A small feature, but it makes video creation a lot smoother. And we know how much you like smooth.
You can also generate two videos at the same time, which makes it easy to experiment with variations. Perfect for when you’re running late to your next huge, embarrassing failure.
The Big Question: Are the Videos Uncensored and Private?
Well, kind of.
Most of the video models on Venice aren’t technically private, but they’re all anonymized. Translation: the companies behind those models can see your generations, but not your name or personal information. So, as long as you don’t include anything stupid or self-identifying in your prompt, there’s no way Sam Altman will ever find out you made it.
If you’re going for maximum freedom, the Wan and Ovi models are the most uncensored and private options. Just don’t expect them to handle anything too spicy. The safety filters still exist, apparently.
In my own testing, I ran explicit prompts through Wan and Ovi. Both accepted the prompts without any rejections, but neither delivered usable results. Both models delivered inconsistent, generally censored videos. None were good enough to show here, so I won’t.
Things may change in the future for uncensored video in Venice. I assume they will, since uncensored has always been one of their main selling points. But for now, uncensored video is unreliable. If that’s your main goal, I’d still recommend using Dzine instead.
The Models Behind Venice Video
Venice now includes a lineup of heavy hitters in AI video:
- Sora 2 (OpenAI)
- Google Veo 3
- Kling
- Wan
- Ovi
That’s a major shift for Venice. They’ve always leaned into open-source tools, but this is their first time integrating the big mainstream names (other than Llama, Deepseek, and some others). It’s like watching your favorite indie band suddenly go on tour with Metallica.
It’s great to see the best models come to Venice, although I’m sure a lot of people will be disappointed by the inability to generate uncensored videos (for now… and in my testing). Personally, I don’t mind, but I know some of you do.
Venice.AI Video Examples + Prompts (Sora 2 and Veo 3.1)
I made a few example videos so you can see how it performs. Keep in mind, I’m not an AI filmmaker, and these aren’t Venice-native models. The quality depends on the third-party model and, honestly, my not-great video-prompting skills so far.
And for the sake of not blowing through my free credits, I did not use the most powerful/expensive models in Venice to make these. The most impressive Sora 2 videos you see floating around online are pretty much all done with Sora 2 Pro, which I did not use.
In any case, this is what I have created so far. They all have sound.
1. Prompt: Camera zooms in on the beautiful woman’s face as she sips coffee in an extremely expensive penthouse apartment in Manila with glowing LED lighting, with the cityscape blurred in the background. Futuristic electronica is playing softly in the background.
Model: Veo 3.1 Fast (1080p)
2. Prompt: First-person POV selfie camera angle, handheld and slightly shaky, warm golden hour lighting streaming through windows. A beautiful, soft-spoken woman in her late 20s with long brown hair, hazel eyes, and a shy smile holds her phone camera. She wears a cream-colored shirt. Her bohemian-style living room has plants and wooden furniture. She pans the camera to reveal a massive tiger, its scaled body at least 12 feet long. The tiger growls and roars, and then the girl starts screaming. Documentary-style realism, shallow depth of field.
Model: Sora 2 (720p)
3. Prompt: Awesome, cinematic, and engaging psychedelic video of this drawing where the flower slowly melts and mutates as the sun pulses and sky swirls. The soft music in the background is futuristic electronica.
Reference Image: The first AI-enhanced image on this page
Model: Veo 3.1 Fast (1080p)
Credits, Pricing, and How It Works
Venice’s credit system applies to video, too:
- $1 = 100 credits
- 1 DIEM = 100 credits per day
- Credit balance = (USD paid + DIEM balance) × 100
If you’re on the Pro plan or a free plan, you already have access. And because Venice likes to make it rain, they dropped free tokens into Venice Pro accounts for testing and for science.
Pro tip: Use promo code RUNTHE20 to get 20% off Venice Pro. Pro subscribers receive a one-time bonus of 1,000 free credits when they upgrade. To give you a general idea, Sora 2 videos at 720p cost 88 credits. That’s 11 Sora 2 videos for free.
What Happens When Stuff Breaks?
Venice’s new FAQ section added a few fresh video-specific entries, like:
- “What happens if my video generation fails?”
- “Why are my videos being blocked?”
- “What are Venice Credits?”
That last one’s the key to understanding the platform’s whole system. If your video doesn’t render or gets flagged, you don’t lose credits. Venice handles that part well.
What’s Next for Venice.AI Video
Users are already requesting CFG scale options for image-to-video generations. It’s on Featurebase, Venice’s public feedback board. No dates yet, but you can likely expect it soon based on how fast they’ve been iterating.
My prediction is Venice releases uncensored videos at some point, as well as some kind of AI video editing options, and the ability to share videos on the Venice social feed.
And because Venice runs on an OpenAI-compatible API, any existing OpenAI client or app can connect with a simple base URL swap. That means developers don’t have to rebuild their tools to plug into Venice’s video system. Smart move.
Wrapping It Up
Venice’s new video generation feature is a strong start. It’s fast, stable, and simple to use.
You get text-to-video, image-to-video, multiple model options from the best providers, and a transparent credit system all in one spot. Privacy is anonymized, not absolute, and the uncensored models still have a way to go, but the foundation is solid.
If you’ve got early access, try it out, play with the “Copy Last Frame” button, and see what you can make. If not, your turn is coming soon.
Got a wild video idea or want to share what you made? Drop it in the comments below.
Until next time, remember to run the prompts and prompt the planet.
Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only. You are solely responsible for your use of Venice AI or any other service and must comply with all applicable laws. By using Venice AI, you assume all risks and liabilities associated with such use. The author is not employed by Venice AI but may receive a referral commission if you sign up or make a purchase using their unique referral link. The author’s opinions are unbiased and not influenced by this arrangement.