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Docs Home /Models /Fawna Motion

Fawna Motion

Motion is built for longer, more stylized clips. It is the tier to reach for when Cinema feels too neutral, when you want anime or illustrated motion, or when you need first-and-last-frame control with strong interpolation quality.

Tier label
Motion
Price
From 15 credits per second
Aspect ratios
16:9, 9:16, 1:1
Resolutions
720p, 1080p
Durations
4, 6, 8, 10 seconds
Audio
Toggle (off by default)
Quality tiers
Standard, Pro
Character refs
Up to 7
Style ref
1 plate
Keyframes
First and last frame
Negative prompt
Supported
Magic Prompt
Off

When to pick Motion

  • You want anime or illustrated looks with visibly stylized motion.
  • You want first-and-last-frame control with smoother interpolation than Cinema.
  • You are on a budget. At 15 credits per second, Motion is roughly half the rate of Cinema.
  • Your scene needs strong pushes, arcs, or tracking moves. Motion handles camera motion especially well.

Strengths

  • Stylized looks: anime, painterly, graphic illustration, comic-book.
  • Clean keyframe interpolation, often smoother than Cinema for the same frame pair.
  • Great camera choreography. Slow arc, orbit, and tracking shots come out confident.
  • Pro quality tier available for hero shots.

Where it struggles

  • Synced dialogue and lip-sync. Prefer Audio.
  • Extremely long narratives: Motion's max is 10 seconds. For 15s clips, Muse is the longer option.
  • Photoreal fidelity near the Film family's level. Motion is strong but not a replacement for Veo-grade realism.

Prompt recipes

Anime Works well with a style plate
Anime scene: a young woman with short silver hair, bangs falling
over her eyes, runs across a rooftop under a sky full of stars.
Wind lifts her coat tails. Camera arcs from behind to her side.
Studio Ghibli palette, hand-drawn linework, soft gradient shading,
24 fps animated feel.
Keyframed action First frame and last frame both set
A runner bursts out of a starting block and accelerates down a red
track. Camera tracks alongside. Medium low angle. Sharp afternoon
sun, hard contrast, slight motion blur on the legs, 35mm film look,
warm track with cool bleachers in the background.

Tips

  • Lead the prompt with the medium when you want stylized output: "Anime scene:" or "Comic panel:" or "Painterly illustration:". This is more effective than trailing style tags.
  • Use Pro for hero shots, Standard for iteration. The fidelity jump is noticeable but not essential for every frame.
  • Longer clips benefit from bigger motion. A 4-second Motion clip with a still camera often feels under-utilized. Let the camera breathe at 8 or 10 seconds.

Where to go next

  • Keyframes to exploit Motion's interpolation strength.
  • Fawna Muse for even longer clips (up to 15s) or more permissive content.
Storyboard
Scene
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