Best Nano Banana Video Prompts
Use this guide to tighten prompts before spending credits on new generations.
The goal is not longer prompts. The goal is prompts with cleaner structure, fewer contradictions, and a clearer motion plan.
Step 1
Write the scene in one line
Define who or what is on screen and what the moment should feel like before adding technical detail.
Step 2
Add motion and camera separately
Describe subject motion and camera motion as separate instructions so the output stays more stable.
Step 3
Refine from the result
If the scene is right but the framing is wrong, adjust only the camera language rather than rewriting everything.
Practical notes
- Short, clear prompts usually outperform bloated prompts.
- Use one style direction at a time.
- Treat examples as structures, not scripts to copy blindly.
Prompt patterns that map to the real tool
The most useful prompt guide is the one that matches how the product already thinks about motion, framing, and control.
Use the cinematic prompt stack
This project's own prompt route already asks for cinematic details, so the guide should mirror that structure.
- Cover mood, subject, lighting, camera angle, camera movement, and lens before you worry about decorative style words.
- Add material or texture details only when they help motion feel believable on screen.
- Use a negative instruction when there is one failure you specifically want to prevent.
Keep a few strong starters ready
Examples are most valuable when they show patterns users can adapt immediately.
- Product shot starter: close-up product framing, one clear camera move, one lighting direction, one premium texture detail.
- Character scene starter: who is moving, what changes emotionally, how the camera follows, and what to avoid.
- Image animation starter: preserve the uploaded composition and only animate motion, atmosphere, and camera drift.
Use a rewrite checklist
Prompt iteration is more effective when users know which line to touch first.
- If motion is weak, rewrite the action and camera lines first.
- If the scene itself is wrong, rewrite subject and setting before you touch style.
- If the output feels too busy, remove stacked style layers and keep one dominant visual direction.
Related pages
Continue with the right next page
Guides should feed users back into the main workflow pages and the actual product tools.