Kling 3.0 on Genosai — long scenes up to 15 seconds with sound and multi-shot
Kling 3.0 is the new generation of video generation from Kuaishou, released on February 5, 2026. It is a fully multimodal model: it works with text, image, sound and video, and generates clips up to 15 seconds with native sound and multi-shot editing. On Genosai the model is available online, with no API keys, in Standard and Pro modes.
Updated: July 7, 2026
- Clips up to 15 seconds — Duration is extended from 10 seconds in the previous version — long scenes are generated in one request.
- Native sound and lip-sync — The model creates speech, singing and effects in sync with video in several languages, with accurate lip-sync.
- Multi-shot editing — A storyboard of several shots with set duration, shot size, angle and camera movement in one generation.
- Standard and Pro modes — Choose between economical Standard and higher-quality Pro — the price is counted per second of the clip.
- Multimodal input — Text-to-video, image-to-video and sample-based work in one next-generation architecture.
- Appearance and voice transfer — From a reference video the model transfers a character's look and voice into new scenes, keeping consistency.
Contents
- What is Kling 3.0
- Capabilities
- Examples
- How to use on Genosai
- Prompts
- Generation cost
- How it compares
- Limitations and tips
- FAQ
What is Kling 3.0
Kling 3.0 is a video generation model by Kuaishou (Kling AI), released on February 5, 2026. It is the new generation of the Kling line with a fully rebuilt multimodal architecture: the model works with text, image, sound and video on both input and output. On Genosai the model is available online, so you do not need API keys or your own infrastructure — generation starts right in the browser.
The main distinction from the previous version is scene scale. Kling 2.6 was capped at 10 seconds and a single shot, while Kling 3.0 generates clips up to 15 seconds and supports multi-shot editing: several shots with set duration, shot size, angle and camera movement in one generation. That is closer to real directing than a single clip.
Sound in Kling 3.0 also became noticeably stronger. The model generates speech, singing and effects in sync with the video and supports several languages with accurate lip-sync. A separate sample-based mode stands out: from a reference video the model can transfer a character's appearance and voice into new scenes, keeping consistency frame to frame.
Who is Kling 3.0 for first of all. It is authors of narrative clips who need long scenes and editing inside one generation. It is creators of ads and clips with sound and talking characters. It is designers and directors who need a controllable storyboard. On Genosai the model runs in two modes — economical Standard and quality Pro — so it is convenient to scale from draft to final.
Capabilities
Kling 3.0 covers tasks where long scenes, sound and controllable editing are needed. Below is what the model does confidently in practice.
Long scenes and multi-shot
Clips up to 15 seconds let you tell a story in one request, and multi-shot editing assembles a whole scene from shots. For each shot you can set duration, shot size, angle, content and camera movement — closer to a director's storyboard than a single clip. So you get a sequence of shots rather than one static move.
Native sound and lip-sync
The model generates speech, singing and sound effects in sync with the picture and supports several languages. The character's mouth shape matches the lines, so dialogue and narration look believable. Sound is created together with the video, which removes the separate dubbing step in another editor.
Standard and Pro modes
On Genosai Kling 3.0 has two quality modes. Standard is more economical and suits drafts, motion selection and a content stream. Pro gives higher quality for final scenes. Both modes are priced per second of the clip, and sound is optional, so spending is easy to scale to the task.
Sample-based work
The multimodal architecture lets you rely on samples. From a reference video the model transfers a character's appearance and voice into new scenes while keeping them recognizable. This is handy for series of clips with one subject and for tasks where preserving the look matters. For precise transfer of the motion itself, there is a separate Kling 3.0 Motion Control mode.
Examples
There are no demo clips on the page yet — video generation is expensive, and we will add them later. The model cover image, however, shows a result typical of Kling 3.0. Below are the typical scenarios teams use the model for:
- A narrative scene up to 15 seconds: several shots with camera movement and sound in one generation.
- A multi-shot clip: a storyboard of wide, medium and close-up shots with a set duration for each.
- An ad with sound: a talking character presents a product, sound and lip-sync in sync with the picture.
- A clip with a character: the subject's look and voice transferred from a sample into a new scene, one look across shots.
- An atmospheric scene: a long move through a location with ready ambience and smooth shot changes.
Finished clips can be downloaded and used in videos, ads and presentations. For short silent scenes and a fast draft stream, see Kling 2.5 Turbo.
How to use on Genosai
Launching Kling 3.0 on Genosai needs no technical setup: everything happens in the browser and the model is already connected. Below is the basic path from sign-in to a finished clip.
- Sign in to your Genosai account and open the video studio.
- Pick Kling 3.0 from the model list.
- Choose the quality mode — Standard or Pro — and turn on sound if the scene needs it.
- Choose the input — generate from text or animate an uploaded photo — and set the duration up to 15 seconds.
- Describe the scene with a prompt: plot, shots, camera movement and character lines.
- Send the request, then refine the result if you like — change the shot, motion or sound.
Prompts
These templates show how to phrase tasks for Kling 3.0. Replace the text in brackets with your own and describe the shots, camera movement and lines — the more specific the prompt, the closer the result to your intent.
A narrative scene [description] over 15 seconds: wide shot, then medium, then close-up, smooth camera movement
A host [description] presents [product] and says: "[line]", studio light, speech audio and accurate lip-sync
Clip: a character from the sample sings [chorus line] on stage, spotlight, synchronized singing, shot changes
An atmospheric move through [location] at sunset, a long scene, background ambience, smooth angle changes, cinematic
Multi-shot scene: wide shot of [scene], then medium shot of [subject], then close-up, smooth camera moves, sound
Animate the uploaded photo: the subject says "[line]" with synchronized articulation, soft light, Pro mode
A dynamic action scene [plot] with shot changes, dramatic light, sound effects from context, 10 seconds
Generation cost
On Genosai Kling 3.0 is priced per second of the clip by mode and whether sound is on — you pay for the actual generation, so a long voiced scene in Pro costs more than a short draft in Standard. The reference points: from 14 credits per second in Standard without sound to 27 credits per second in Pro with sound; the in-between variants are 18 (Pro without sound) and 20 (Standard with sound). For example, 5 seconds in Standard without sound costs 70 credits.
A practical approach is to dial in the scene and shots on short takes in Standard without sound, then generate the final variant in Pro with sound and the needed duration. Starter credits after sign-up let you try the model for free, and top-ups are available. See current rates and balance in the Pricing section.
How it compares
Kling 3.0 is the pick for long scenes with sound and controllable editing. If a short scene with sound is enough, Kling 2.6 is cheaper. When character motion needs to be set from a reference video, look at Kling 3.0 Motion Control. Among quality competitors are Veo 3.1 Quality from Google and Seedance 2.0 from ByteDance.
| Model | Duration | Audio | Price | Strength |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kling 3.0 | 3–15 s | native | from 14 cr/s | Long scenes and multi-shot |
| Kling 2.6 | 5–10 s | native | 55–220 credits | Sound and lip-sync |
| Veo 3.1 Quality | short | native | from 250 credits | Google top quality |
| Seedance 2.0 | up to 12 s | none | from 9 cr/s | Flexible price by resolution |
All models are available in one Genosai interface, so you can compare them on your task and pick the best by price and quality. A sensible tactic is to keep Kling 2.6 for short scenes with sound and take Kling 3.0 for long stories with editing.
Limitations and tips
Kling 3.0 is strong at long scenes and sound, but it has its limits. Generation in Pro with sound is noticeably more expensive, so drafts are cheaper to assemble in Standard without sound. Maximum duration is 15 seconds, so longer video has to be stitched from several clips. We do not state exact native resolution and frame-rate specs, so as not to present unconfirmed numbers as fact — on Genosai, go by the Standard and Pro modes.
Another common trap is not writing the storyboard. Multi-shot editing shines when you explicitly set the shot changes: wide, medium, close-up, and camera movement for each. If you leave it to the model, the scene comes out less controllable. Write the character lines in quotes too and note whether sound is needed — otherwise the model fills in the audio for you.
For the best result, work iteratively: dial in the scene and shots on short takes in Standard, pick a strong variant and regenerate it in Pro with sound and the needed duration. And if a character needs precise motion set from a reference video, compare the result with Kling 3.0 Motion Control on the same task.
FAQ
What is Kling 3.0 and who built it?
Kling 3.0 is a video generation model by Kuaishou (Kling AI), released on February 5, 2026. It is the new generation of the line with a fully multimodal architecture that works with text, image, sound and video. On Genosai it is available online with no separate subscription or API keys.
How does Kling 3.0 differ from Kling 2.6?
Kling 3.0 extends duration to 15 seconds against 10 in Kling 2.6 and adds multi-shot editing — several shots in one generation. Native sound became multilingual, and the multimodal architecture unites text, image, sound and video in one model.
What duration do Kling 3.0 clips have?
Kling 3.0 generates clips from 3 to 15 seconds. That is noticeably more than the 10 seconds of the previous version, so a long scene can be assembled in one request. You choose the exact duration before running, and it determines the generation price.
What are the Standard and Pro modes?
On Genosai Kling 3.0 has two quality modes: economical Standard and higher-quality Pro. Both are priced per second of the clip, and sound is optional. Standard suits drafts and a content stream, Pro suits final scenes where maximum quality matters.
How much does one Kling 3.0 generation cost?
On Genosai the price is counted per second of the clip by mode and whether sound is on: from 14 credits per second in Standard without sound to 27 credits in Pro with sound. For example, 5 seconds in Standard without sound costs 70 credits. You pay for actual generations.
Do I need API keys to use the model?
No. Genosai gives access to Kling 3.0 right in the browser — no API keys or infrastructure setup. Just sign in to Genosai and pick the model in the video studio.