Transistorpunk AI Videos

Render the solid-state age in your browser with Morphic's transistorpunk AI video generator. Create a hobbyist soldering a glowing circuit board, a bakelite tube radio warming to a soft amber dial, or a wall of analog hi-fi gear with dancing VU needles. Voice a mellow announcer with the Speech tool and cut the moments together in Compose.

Transistorpunk characters you can direct

Transistorpunk scenes you can stage

A soldering-bench close-up

A tight macro push-in on a soldering iron touching a green circuit board, solder beading and a thin curl of smoke rising, germanium transistors and coiled wire glinting under a warm swing-arm lamp.

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A bakelite radio warming up

A slow dolly toward a bakelite tube radio as its valves warm to a soft orange glow, the amber dial brightening and the speaker cloth humming, warm lamplight pooling on a wood side table beside it.

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A wall of analog hi-fi

A steady tracking shot along a wood-panelled wall of analog amplifiers and tuners, VU needles dancing across lit meters, a turntable spinning at the end, warm valve glow reflected in the glass dials.

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A hobbyist electronics workshop

A gentle orbit around a cluttered hobbyist bench of half-built radios and breadboards, meters and oscilloscopes glowing softly, coiled wire and tools everywhere, warm afternoon light through a dusty window.

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Make Transistorpunk videos in three steps

  1. 01

    Describe your Transistorpunk scene

    Write the Transistorpunk 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 Transistorpunk video

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

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$9/ month
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FAQs

Where can I make transistorpunk videos with AI?
You can create transistorpunk scenes directly in your browser on Morphic. Open the Text to Video tool, describe the tinkerer or operator, the workbench or radio-shop setting, and the warm valve glow, and Morphic produces the clip. No installs and no specialist software needed.
What defines transistorpunk for an AI prompt?
Four things: a hobbyist figure (a workbench tinkerer, a radio repairman, a hi-fi enthusiast), a bench or radio-shop setting, warm valve and lamp light, and solid-state detail like bakelite, germanium transistors, and exposed circuit boards. Name all four and the scene lands in the transistorpunk register.
How do I keep my transistorpunk characters consistent across scenes?
Use the Character Lineup workflow to lock in each figure’s look, then reference those character cards in every prompt. Morphic preserves the rolled-sleeve shirt, the apron, and the cardigan so a transistorpunk series feels continuous from bench to listening room.
How do I write a good prompt for a transistorpunk scene?
Name the figure, the moment, the setting, the warm light, and the camera move. For example: "a tight macro push-in on a soldering iron touching a green circuit board, solder beading, germanium transistors glinting under a warm swing-arm lamp." The more specific your imagery, the closer the output lands.
Can I add narration and music to my transistorpunk videos?
Yes. The Speech tool generates a voiceover from your script, a mellow radio-announcer read, and the Music tool produces warm valve-amp jazz that suits the era. Layer both onto the generated clip to publish a complete transistorpunk short.
How is transistorpunk different from a clockpunk or cassette futurism video?
Transistorpunk is the warm 1950s-60s solid-state future of bakelite radios, germanium transistors, and hobbyist benches. Clockpunk is far older, built from Renaissance brass gears and clockwork. Cassette futurism is the later, grubbier 1970s-80s beige-computing future. Use this page when the warm early-electronics workbench mood is the point.