Kling 3.0 Turbo features and capabilities
Kling 3.0 Turbo is the speed-tuned variant of Kuaishou's Kling 3.0 video model. It keeps the family's prompt adherence and multi-shot storyboarding, but renders quickly at 720p or 1080p, which makes it the practical pick when a project needs many clips rather than one hero shot.
| Feature | What it does | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Fast, high-volume generation | Renders quickly at 720p or 1080p so you can run more variations per session | Batch social clips, testing, deadline work |
| Strong prompt adherence | Reads detailed prompts closely, so subject, action, and framing land as written | Directed shots, repeatable briefs |
| Multi-shot storyboards | Composes up to six shots in one generation, holding character and setting across cuts | Short ad spots, narrative sequences |
| Image-to-video | Animates a still first frame into a moving clip from a written prompt | Product shots, character frames, key art |
| Flexible output | 720p or 1080p, in 16:9, 9:16, or 1:1, from 3 to 15 seconds | Platform-specific delivery |
Fast, high-volume generation
Turbo is tuned for speed over peak resolution. It outputs 720p or 1080p, which keeps render times short enough to iterate, so you can block a scene, judge it, and re-run a variation without a long wait between takes. That throughput is the whole point of the tier.
Strong prompt adherence
Kling 3.0 Turbo follows a detailed brief closely. When you name the subject, the action, the camera, and the framing, those choices show up in the result rather than drifting, which makes a planned shot more predictable to reproduce.
Multi-shot storyboards
A single generation can hold up to six shots, with each shot carrying its own framing and duration while characters and setting stay consistent from cut to cut. A short scene with a wide, a medium, and a close-up comes out of one prompt instead of three separate clips stitched together.
Image-to-video
Turbo animates from a still. Provide a first-frame image such as a product shot or a character frame, add a prompt describing the motion, and the model animates outward from that frame. It also runs text-to-video when you have no starting image.
Flexible output
Pick 720p for drafts or 1080p for delivery, in 16:9, 9:16, or 1:1, with clips from 3 to 15 seconds. The same prompt framework produces widescreen, vertical, and square cuts without a separate workflow per format.
Kling 3.0 Turbo technical specs
| Spec | Kling 3.0 Turbo |
|---|---|
| Provider | Kuaishou (Kling AI) |
| Modes | Text-to-video, image-to-video |
| Resolution | 720p or 1080p |
| Aspect ratios | 16:9, 9:16, 1:1 |
| Duration | 3 to 15 seconds (default 5) |
| Multi-shot | Up to 6 shots per generation |
| Prompt length | Up to 3072 characters (about 2500 recommended) |
| Released | June 2026 |
Kling 3.0 Turbo use cases
High-volume social content
Generate vertical clips for Shorts, Reels, and TikTok in batches, with quick turnaround for testing variations before you commit to a final.
Multi-shot ad creative
Storyboard a short spot with several cuts in one prompt. A wide, a medium, and a close-up read as one piece, with the subject consistent across the cuts.
Character close-ups and performance
Hold a character's look across talking-head framings and reaction shots, with expression and motion that stay readable from cut to cut.
Rapid prototyping
Block a scene out at 720p to check motion and pacing, then re-run the keeper at 1080p once the direction is locked.
Product and marketing video
Turn a product photo into motion with image-to-video, or build a launch clip from a written prompt, with the product holding its look through the move.
Global campaign variations
Reuse one visual treatment across markets, generating fresh cuts and framings from the same prompt so a launch rolls out with a consistent look.
How to get the best out of Kling 3.0 Turbo
Turbo rewards a clear, motion-focused brief and a workflow that leans on its speed. A few practices carry most of the quality:
- Draft at 720p, deliver at 1080p. Use the fast tier to find the shot, then re-run the keeper at the higher resolution once the direction is locked.
- Write motion, not a photo. Describe how the subject and camera move over the clip, not just how the frame looks at a single instant.
- Name the camera. Give a shot type and one move, like medium shot with a slow push-in, rather than leaving it to chance.
- One beat per shot. Keep a single action in each shot and use multi-shot mode to chain several into a scene.
- Use a first frame for consistency. For product or character work, start from a still image so the look is fixed before the motion begins.
- Spend the prompt budget. Turbo reads up to about 2500 characters well, so detail on subject, setting, and lighting pays off.
Kling 3.0 Turbo prompt guide
A strong prompt reads like a short shot brief, not a caption. Two things drive the result: a clear list of what the shot contains, and concrete wording in place of vague wording.
What goes in a prompt
| Element | What to include | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Subject | Who or what is in frame, described concretely | a cyclist in a yellow jersey |
| Motion | What moves, and how | she climbs out of the saddle, standing on the pedals |
| Camera | Shot type plus one move | low tracking shot, slow push-in |
| Setting | Place, time, and light | a mountain switchback at dawn, cool side light |
| Format | Duration and aspect ratio | 5 seconds, 16:9 |
Multi-shot prompt syntax
For a multi-shot storyboard, Turbo reads a fixed format: each shot gets a number, a duration in seconds, and its own prompt, separated by semicolons.
shot 1, 3s, wide low-angle of a cyclist cresting a ridge at dawn; shot 2, 2s, medium tracking shot on her face, breath visible; shot 3, 2s, close-up of pedals turning, gravel spray
Three rules keep it predictable:
- Up to six shots in one generation, at least one.
- Each shot runs no less than one second, and the shot durations add up to the total clip length.
- Each shot prompt stays under about 500 characters, so keep every shot to a single beat.
Weak vs strong prompts
Name the camera, the motion and its timing, and the setting rather than leaving them to chance.
| Focus | Weak | Strong |
|---|---|---|
| Camera | A woman in a city at night | Handheld tracking shot following a woman in a dark coat through rain-slicked streets, reflections on the pavement, shallow depth of field |
| Motion and timing | The door opens and someone walks in | The door swings open slowly, a figure steps through after a beat, then the camera settles into a medium shot |
| Setting | A perfume bottle on a surface | Camera slowly orbits a glass perfume bottle on dark velvet, warm light catching the facets as it turns, scattered petals shifting from the air movement |
Common mistakes
- Describing a still: a video model needs motion over time, not a photograph in words.
- Vague camera: "cinematic" tells the model nothing; name the shot and the move.
- Too much in one shot: keep one action per shot, then chain shots in multi-shot mode.
- Forcing 4K: Turbo tops out at 1080p by design; use Kling 3.0 when a shot has to hold up at maximum resolution.
Kling 3.0 Turbo vs Kling 3.0
Both share the Kling 3.0 generation core, so the difference is speed and resolution against peak fidelity.
| Kling 3.0 Turbo | Kling 3.0 | |
|---|---|---|
| Built for | Iteration and batch work | A single hero shot at top quality |
| Resolution | 720p or 1080p | Up to native 4K |
| Render time | Fast | Longer per render |
| Multi-shot | Up to 6 shots | Up to 6 shots |
| When to pick | Many clips, quick turnaround, testing | One shot that has to hold up at maximum detail |
A common workflow is to block a scene out on Turbo, lock the direction, then re-run the keeper on Kling 3.0 when a final needs the extra resolution. On Morphic, both sit in the same video model picker, so switching between them takes one dropdown without leaving the project.
FAQs
Draft at 720p to find the shot, then re-run the keeper at 1080p. Write motion rather than a still, name a shot type and one camera move, and keep one action per shot, chaining several with multi-shot mode for a full scene.
You can describe up to six shots in a single generation. Each shot takes a number, a duration in seconds, and its own prompt, written as "shot 1, 3s, ...; shot 2, 2s, ...". Each shot runs at least one second, the shot durations add up to the total clip length, and the model holds character and setting consistency across the cuts.
Yes. Turbo handles both text-to-video and image-to-video. Bring a still first frame, such as a product shot or a character frame, add a prompt describing the motion, and the model animates outward from that frame.
Turbo outputs 720p or 1080p in 16:9, 9:16, or 1:1. Clips run from 3 to 15 seconds per generation, with a 5-second default. In a multi-shot storyboard the per-shot durations add up to the total clip length.
Both share the same generation core. Turbo is optimized for speed and high-volume work and outputs 720p or 1080p. Kling 3.0 reaches higher resolution and takes longer per render, so it is the pick when a single shot needs maximum fidelity. Use Turbo for iteration and batch work, Kling 3.0 for top-quality finals.
Open Morphic, switch the prompt bar to Video mode, and pick Kling 3.0 Turbo from the model picker. Describe the shot or the full multi-shot scene, attach a first-frame image for image-to-video if you have one, choose 720p or 1080p and an aspect ratio, then run the prompt.
