AI Gaming Video Maker
Make game promos, stream intros, content overlays, and trailer cinematics — without needing footage, motion graphics skills, or a video editor on retainer. Type the gaming scene, generate cinematic AI footage, ship to YouTube / Twitch / TikTok the same night.
Start from a proven prompt
Hover to preview. Click any example to prefill the generator.
Astronaut explorer character on alien Mars surface, dust kicking up in low gravity — sci-fi game trailer opener
Parkour runner leaping across rooftops in neon-lit Tokyo, dynamic motion blur, cinematic frame
Skater character landing trick in slow motion, sunset backlight, urban texture — sports/action game promo
Sci-fi character in armor walking toward distant alien city, atmospheric haze, dramatic music swell implied
Stylized cartoon character with exaggerated expression, bouncy animation — for casual mobile game trailer
Cyberpunk vertical 9:16 — rainy neon street, lone figure with weapon silhouetted — TikTok game promo
Video Examples
See it in action
Why gVideo
Built for results
AAA cinematic without AAA budget
Type the action sequence, get a usable cinematic clip in 90 seconds. Indie studios and content creators can now produce trailer-grade footage that previously required Unreal scenes + motion capture.
Stream intros + content overlays
Twitch and YouTube creators need stream intros, scene transitions, donation alerts, and stinger clips. Generate them in batches at $0.50-$1 each instead of buying $50 templates.
Vertical for TikTok game promos
Mobile games on TikTok convert best at 9:16 vertical. gVideo natively supports vertical generation — no cropping, no awkward letterboxing.
Not sure which model?
Our pick for gaming video
Kling 3.0
40 credits per 5s (~$0.89 on Pro)Best for gaming cinematics — strong action choreography, weapon-and-armor detail preservation, fantasy and sci-fi environments. Mid-tier price for high creative output.
“I run an indie strategy game launch on Steam. Used to spend $8k per trailer. Made the new launch trailer entirely in gVideo over 3 days for under $80 in credits — wishlist conversion rate matched the previous trailer.”
Common questions
What kinds of gaming videos work well with the AI gaming video maker?
Three patterns: (1) game promo trailers — cinematic establishing shots, character reveals, atmosphere; (2) stream intros and outros for Twitch / YouTube — short branded loops with stylized motion; (3) content creator B-roll — establishing shots between gameplay segments, transition stingers, fake-in-game footage for thumbnails. Categories where it struggles: matching specific in-game art style exactly (use actual gameplay capture for that).
Can the AI match my game's specific art style?
Partially. For broad style families (cyberpunk, fantasy, anime, realistic, low-poly), prompts work reliably. For exact brand-specific styles (e.g., 'matches our specific cell-shaded look from Studio X'), you'll need to mix AI-generated B-roll with actual gameplay captures and concept art. Most indie devs use AI for environment shots + atmospheric establishers, and real gameplay capture for the playable demo segments.
How long can a single AI gaming clip be?
Each generation is 4-10 seconds. Most game trailers are 30-90 seconds total — built from 8-16 stitched clips. The 60-second YouTube preview format and 30-second Steam trailer format are both great fits for AI-generated cinematic sequences.
Can I generate vertical 9:16 for TikTok game promos?
Yes. Pick 9:16 ratio when you generate. Mobile game ads on TikTok and Reels strongly outperform horizontal — gVideo natively renders at 1080×1920 (or higher) without cropping or letterboxing.
Will the AI generate copyrighted characters or game IP accidentally?
Models block explicit prompts for known IP (Mario, Master Chief, etc). For your own indie game characters, prompt with descriptive features ('a tall warrior in obsidian armor with a glowing blue sigil on the chest plate') rather than character names. For inspiration of specific games, use style references, not name references — 'cyberpunk detective in rainy neon city' rather than 'character from Cyberpunk 2077.'
What's a realistic cost for a game launch trailer?
A 60-second trailer typically uses 12-18 AI clips. At Kling 3.0 cost (40 credits / 5s) that's ~600-900 credits ≈ $14-20 on the Pro plan. Mixing in some Wan 2.6 clips for non-hero shots brings this down further. A traditional indie game trailer costs $3k-15k via freelancer or agency.
Ready to generate?
Start free — 100 credits on signup, no credit card required.
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