Water Simulation AI Videos

Simulate moving water in your browser with Morphic's Water simulation AI video generator. Generate water simulation shots like an ocean wave curling into a barrel, a dam bursting into a valley flood, or a single droplet splashing into a perfect crown, and pair them with the Speech and Music tools to add the roar of the water and score the surge. Stitch the shots into a full effects reel on the Canvas.

Water Simulation elements you can generate

Water Simulation shots you can direct

Barrel wave, slow motion

Slow-motion shot from inside the curl looking out through the barrel, water spinning overhead, spray blowing back off the lip and low sun glowing green through the wave wall.

Edit prompt

Valley flood, aerial

Aerial push-in following a dam-burst flood down a river valley, the brown surge fanning around bends and swallowing fields, whitewater churning at the leading edge.

Edit prompt

Droplet crown, macro

Extreme macro locked on a still pool as a single drop lands, the liquid crown rising and beading in crisp slow motion, ripples radiating out to the edge of frame.

Edit prompt

Whitewater run, tracking

Low tracking shot skimming just above a river of rapids, foam and mist bursting past the lens, boulders splitting the current into standing waves under bright daylight.

Edit prompt

Make Water Simulation videos in three steps

  1. 01

    Describe your Water Simulation scene

    Write the Water 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 Water Simulation video

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

Related workflows

You might also like

Simple pricing

Get started for free today, with the option to upgrade or cancel anytime.

Basic

$0/ month
billed as $0 per year

900 monthly credits

1 user only

All models

Workflows

Standard

$0/ month
billed as $0 per year

3200 monthly credits

1 user only

All models

Workflows

Pro

$0/ month
billed as $0 per year

6200 shared monthly credits

1 user

+ up to 4 more at extra cost

All models

Workflows

Pro Max

$0/ month
billed as $0 per year

24000 shared monthly credits

1 user

+ up to 9 more at extra cost

All models

Workflows

Enterprise

For higher limits

Custom

pricing and billing terms

Unlimited credits
Custom seat limits
All models
Workflows
Pricing Gradient

Free

For playing around

$0

forever free

Up to 20 credits
1 user only
Limited models
Workflows

FAQs

Where can I make water simulation videos with AI?
You can create water simulation shots directly in your browser on Morphic. Open the Text to Video tool, describe the body of water, the motion, and the camera move, and Morphic produces the clip. No installs and no fluid-solver software needed.
What makes a good water simulation shot for an AI prompt?
A clear body of water and a clear motion: name what it is (wave, flood, droplet, rapids) and what it does (curling, surging, splashing, churning), then add secondary detail such as foam, spray, mist, or bubbles. Scale and lighting decide whether the fluid feels heavy and real.
How do I keep the look consistent across water shots?
Reuse the same descriptive language in every prompt: the same water colour, foam and spray behaviour, and lighting. For a recurring element like a signature wave, lock it with the Character Lineup workflow and reference it in each shot so a sequence reads as one continuous body of water.
How do I write a good prompt for a water simulation shot?
Name the element, the scale, the lighting, and the camera plus slow motion. For example: "a giant ocean wave curling into a hollow barrel, spray feathering off the lip, low sun glowing green through the water, slow-motion shot from inside the curl." The more concrete the fluid behaviour, the closer the result lands.
Can I add sound design and music to my water simulation videos?
Yes. The Speech tool generates narration from your script, and the Music tool produces a score you can build the roar, hiss, and low surge of the water against. Layer both onto the generated clip to publish a finished water sequence.
Should water shots be photoreal or stylized?
Both work. Photoreal suits ocean, disaster, and nature reels where the water needs weight, so name real foam, spray, and daylight. Stylized suits animation and motion graphics, so specify the render look. Water also pairs well with fire, smoke, and destruction sims when a scene needs several forces at once.