Fire Simulation AI Videos

Ignite combustion in your browser with Morphic's Fire simulation AI video generator. Generate fire simulation shots like a wildfire racing up a hillside, a fuel tank going up in a rolling fireball, or a single candle flame flickering in macro, and pair them with the Speech and Music tools to add the crackle and roar and score the heat. Stitch the shots into a full effects reel on the Canvas.

Fire Simulation elements you can generate

Fire Simulation shots you can direct

Wildfire front, aerial

Aerial push-in tracking a wildfire line up a ridge at dusk, the orange front glowing against dark hills, a wall of smoke towering behind and embers streaking across the frame.

Edit prompt

Fireball blast, slow motion

Slow-motion wide shot of a fuel tank rupturing, the fireball blooming and rolling upward in churning detail, black smoke chasing the flame as debris arcs out of the blast.

Edit prompt

Candle flame, macro

Extreme macro locked on a single candle flame in a dark room, the blue base and orange teardrop flickering, a draft bending the tip and a thin thread of smoke rising off it.

Edit prompt

Fire-breath sweep, tracking

Low tracking shot as a jet of flame sweeps across scorched ground, the fire fanning and rolling toward the lens, sparks and heat shimmer filling the frame against a dark sky.

Edit prompt

Make Fire Simulation videos in three steps

  1. 01

    Describe your Fire Simulation scene

    Write the Fire Simulation scene you want, in plain words.

  2. 02

    Generate the video

    Morphic generates a cinematic, frame-ready clip on your canvas in seconds.

  3. 03

    Refine your Fire Simulation video

    Tweak the prompt, regenerate variations, then download or share the shot.

Related workflows

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FAQs

Where can I make fire simulation videos with AI?
You can create fire simulation shots directly in your browser on Morphic. Open the Text to Video tool, describe the fire source, the scale, and the camera move, and Morphic produces the clip. No installs and no combustion-solver software needed.
What makes a good fire simulation shot for an AI prompt?
A clear source and a clear behaviour: name what is burning (wildfire, fuel tank, candle, building) and how the flame moves (racing, rolling, guttering, roaring), then add smoke, embers, and heat shimmer. Scale and lighting decide whether the fire feels hot and physical.
How do I keep the look consistent across fire shots?
Reuse the same descriptive language in every prompt: the same flame colour, smoke tone, ember behaviour, and lighting. For a recurring element like a signature fireball, lock it with the Character Lineup workflow and reference it in each shot so a sequence reads as one continuous blaze.
How do I write a good prompt for a fire simulation shot?
Name the element, the scale, the lighting, and the camera plus slow motion. For example: "a fuel tank rupturing into a churning orange fireball, the blast rolling upward into black smoke, debris arcing out, slow-motion wide shot at dusk." The more concrete the combustion you describe, the closer the result lands.
Can I add sound design and music to my fire simulation videos?
Yes. The Speech tool generates narration from your script, and the Music tool produces a score you can build the crackle, roar, and whoosh of the fire against. Layer both onto the generated clip to publish a finished fire sequence.
Should fire shots be photoreal or stylized?
Both work. Photoreal suits disaster and action reels where the fire needs to feel dangerous, so name real flame colour, smoke, and embers. Stylized suits animation and fantasy, so specify the render look. Fire also pairs well with smoke and destruction sims when a blast needs the full plume and debris to read at scale.