High-quality text-to-speech with MiniMax Speech 02, 2.5, 2.6, and 2.8 (Turbo and HD). Multiple preset voices and natural intonation.
Audio prompts work best when they define mood, pacing, structure, and finish. The more clearly you describe the role of the sound, the cleaner the result tends to be.
Best results start with voice intent, pacing, and delivery style.
MiniMax Speech on Pixio is high-quality text-to-speech with MiniMax Speech 02, 2.5, 2.6, and 2.8 in Turbo and HD variants. Multiple preset voices and natural intonation. Use it when you need fast, natural TTS with a choice of voices and quality tiers—good for narration, dialogue, and voiceover without voice cloning.
MiniMax Speech on Pixio is high-quality text-to-speech with MiniMax Speech 02, 2.5, 2.6, and 2.8 in Turbo and HD variants. Multiple preset voices and natural intonation. Use it when you need fast, natural TTS with a choice of voices and quality tiers—good for narration, dialogue, and voiceover without voice cloning.
| Mode | Input | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Text to Speech | Text + voice (preset) | Narration, dialogue, voiceover |
| Option | Values | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Variant | Speech 02, 2.5, 2.6, 2.8 | Newer = better quality; check Pixio for availability |
| Quality | Turbo, HD | Turbo = speed/cost; HD = fidelity |
| Voice | Preset list | Choose from MiniMax preset voices |
| Credits | Plan-based | Check model card in Pixio |
| Scenario | Best choice |
|---|---|
| MiniMax TTS, preset voices, Turbo/HD | MiniMax Speech |
| TTS with voice clone, multilingual | ElevenLabs TTS |
| Dialogue / multi-speaker | ElevenLabs Dialogue |
| Music generation | Pixio Music, Lyria 2, Stable Audio |
Use production language, not just genre labels.
Tell the model how the energy should move over time.
For speech, define delivery style, tone, and pacing.
For music, define arrangement and emotional arc early.
A strong audio prompt describes role, pacing, tone, and finish so the output feels produced rather than generic.
Tell the model how the voice should land: tone, pacing, energy, and clarity.
Define how the piece should progress so the output feels intentional instead of flat or repetitive.
Use stronger prompts and cleaner references once the direction is already working.
MiniMax Speech is strongest when the brief is clear about function: what the sound should do, how it should move, and what it should feel like.
Use structure language early so the output lands closer to production-ready on the first passes.
For voice work, specify delivery and character. For music, specify arrangement and emotional progression.
Decide whether the output is carrying narrative, mood, rhythm, or all three.
Describe the build, energy, and transitions so the result has movement instead of flattening out.
Once the direction is right, refine and separate instead of regenerating blindly.
Pair voice generation with cloning when continuity across campaigns or characters matters.
Use generated music or speech as the finishing layer once the visual cut is already working.