Kling 3.0 Motion Control on Genso AI: Motion Transfer From a Reference Video
How AI motion transfer works on Genso AI: upload a character image and a 3–30s driving video, pick Standard or Pro, and optional scene prompts. Credit tips and quality checklist.
What Kling 3.0 Motion Control does
Kling 3.0 Motion Control is a motion transfer workflow: you provide a character image (the person or design you want to see move) and a driving video (3–30 seconds) that encodes the performance — gait, gestures, timing. Genso AI generates a new clip that applies that motion to your character.
This is different from image-to-video in Video Lab, where a single still is animated from a text prompt. Motion Control is built for "make this character move like this reference" — dance takes, fight choreography, presentation mannerisms, and other performance-driven briefs.
On Genso AI, Motion Control lives under Character Swap with deep link `/character-swap?model=kling-v3-motion-control`.
Standard vs Pro
Genso AI exposes Standard and Pro tiers. Both accept the same inputs; Pro is tuned for higher visual fidelity. Credits scale with the length of your motion reference (longer driving clips cost more — check the in-app credit preview before you render).
Optional Keep Original Audio lets you retain sound from the driving clip when that helps lip sync or ambient continuity.
Reference checklist
Driving video: Prefer a single clear performer, stable framing, and readable motion. Abrupt cuts or heavy occlusion confuse temporal models.
Character image: Well-lit, forward-facing or slight three-quarter, one subject — similar guidance to face-forward character swap references.
Prompt: Optional but useful for lighting, wardrobe continuity, or background mood when you do not want the raw plate look.
When to use Motion Control vs Kling 3.0 image-to-video
Choose Motion Control when you already have a performance reference you want replicated. Choose Kling 3.0 or Kling Omni O3 in Video Lab when you are starting from one or two key frames and describing motion in language instead of copying a clip.
Many teams storyboard in Motion Control for hero moves, then polish inserts with image-to-video models.
Ready to try it yourself? Free credits on sign up.
Open Motion Control