Create a custom voice for use with Kling video—clone or design a voice so your Kling generations speak with a consistent character.
This model gets stronger as the shot becomes more explicit. Give it a subject, a move, a frame, and a mood so the output feels directed instead of guessed.
Best results start with a directed prompt or a strong first frame.
Kling Create Voice on Pixio lets you create a custom voice for use with Kling video. Clone or design a voice from a clean audio sample (e.g. 5-30 seconds); then use your Kling voice ID in Kling video generations for consistent character voice.
Kling Create Voice on Pixio lets you create a custom voice for use with Kling video. Clone or design a voice from a clean audio sample (e.g. 5-30 seconds); then use your Kling voice ID in Kling video generations for consistent character voice.
| Mode | Input | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Create Voice | Clean audio sample (e.g. 5-30s) | Create a voice ID for Kling video |
Sample length and format, voice ID output, and credits depend on plan; check the model card in Pixio.
Credits are typically per voice creation (one-time); check the model card in Pixio for current rates.
| Scenario | Best choice |
|---|---|
| Create custom voice for Kling video | Kling Create Voice |
| Generate Kling video | Kling, Kling o1 |
| One-off talking head (no custom voice) | Fabric, Character 3, OmniHuman |
| Custom avatar (face and voice train) | Argil Avatars Train |
Start with a strong first frame when consistency matters more than surprise.
Keep each prompt focused on one primary motion direction.
Use shorter runs for iteration, then scale up for finals.
For narratives, structure the idea as Shot 1 / Shot 2 / Shot 3 instead of one flat blob.
A strong video prompt gives the scene a subject, a move, camera behavior, and a mood to hold onto.
Start from language and push for camera intent, pacing, atmosphere, and shot design in one move.
Start from a frame or reference when consistency matters more than improvisation.
Continue or refine the clip without throwing away the visual language you already established.
Kling Create Voice works well when the prompt needs motion, framing, and visual direction, not just subject matter.
Use it for sequences that need a strong first frame, continuity, or a clearly controlled camera idea.
Treat each generation like a shot brief instead of a loose caption to get more cinematic outputs.
Start with either a directed text brief or a strong frame, depending on how locked the look already is.
Write the motion like a director: subject, action, camera behavior, environment, lighting, and tone.
Iterate fast on shorter runs, then move to stronger finals once the rhythm feels right.
Use it to build a stronger first frame, then hand that frame to the video model for motion and continuity.
Pair it with frame extraction, merge tools, or image prep so the motion workflow stays clean end to end.