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The issue. A video takes several regenerations to get right, and each one spends credits. Why it happens. Video has more moving parts than a static: script, scenes, voice, captions, and timing. A vague brief compounds across all of them, so small gaps turn into big rework.

How customers fix it

  • Plan in chat first. Settle the audience, angle, script, and references with the agent before you render. A planning chat costs next to nothing; generating is where credits go.
  • Test cheap before you scale. Validate the hook and message with a static or a short clip, then commit to the full video once the direction is clear.
  • Attach the exact inputs up front. Product footage, app screenshots, and pronunciation for brand names belong in video context before the first render, not after the third.
  • Edit scene by scene. If one scene is weak, regenerate just that scene instead of rebuilding the whole video.
  • Be specific about the creator and setting. “Casual founder in a home office, upbeat” beats “UGC ad.”
If you’ve regenerated the same thing three times, stop and change the brief, not the dice. Tighten the script or attach the missing reference before spending again.

Set up video context

The footage, references, and rules that get video right the first time.
Last modified on June 4, 2026