Generating video with AI is the most spectacular — and most expensive — frontier of creative AI in 2026. Sora, Runway, Kling, Veo, and Pika produce clips that two years ago looked like science fiction. Here we compare which to use depending on your goal, budget, and skill level, no hype.
What happened
Video was the last stronghold AI hadn’t conquered: too many frames to keep coherent. In 2026 that wall fell. We now generate clips of several seconds with believable motion, reasonable physics, and in some cases synced audio. Not perfect, but usable.
It’s still the most compute-heavy AI task, so almost everything runs on credits or subscriptions and free plans are limited.
Why it matters
A promo video or animation used to cost thousands of dollars and weeks of production. Today you can prototype a visual idea in minutes. For marketing, social media, presentations, and creators, that changes the rules: making and discarding ideas becomes cheap.
Caveat: AI video doesn’t replace professional production for long pieces yet — it shines for short clips, concepts, and B-roll.
The tools that matter
Sora (OpenAI): among the most realistic in physics and coherence, integrated in OpenAI’s ecosystem. Great for cinematic, realistic scenes.
Runway (Gen-3/Gen-4): favored by many pros for its control: editing, camera motion, masks. More “creative studio” than toy.
Kling: surprises with quality and clip duration at a great price. Very strong in human motion.
Veo (Google): great quality and, in recent versions, audio generation. Integrated in the Google ecosystem.
Pika: focused on speed, fun effects, and ease of use for social creators. Very smooth entry curve.
Quick comparison
- Most realistic and cinematic: Sora or Veo
- Most professional control: Runway
- Best quality-price ratio: Kling
- Easiest to start with: Pika
- Audio included: Veo
Which to pick for your case
Social media and creators: Pika or Kling for speed and cost.
Marketing and brand: Runway for control; Sora or Veo for realism.
Film and concept: Sora or Veo to previz scenes.
Tight budget: Kling offers a lot for little.
How to get the most out of it
- Think in short clips: 3-10 seconds per shot; chain them in editing.
- Describe camera and motion: “overhead shot, slow dolly” beats just describing the scene.
- Image to video: start from a good still (generated with Midjourney or Flux) and animate it for more control.
- Iterate cheap: generate several versions and keep the best instead of hunting for first-try perfection.
Limitations and things to keep in mind
- Long-form coherence: keeping a character or scene identical across many shots is still hard.
- Cost: generating video burns lots of credits; plan accordingly.
- Hands, text, and fine details still fail.
- Rights and deepfakes: don’t generate faces of real people without permission; check each platform’s commercial license.
Our verdict
AI video in 2026 is already a real work tool for short clips, not an experiment. If you’re starting, Pika or Kling give you fast results without breaking the bank. If you want cinematic quality, Sora and Veo lead. And if you want professional control, Runway is the safe bet.
Related on NodoAI: see Sora, Runway, Kling, Veo, and Pika.