How to Write Veo 3 Prompts: Complete Tutorial
Learn to create amazing AI videos with simple, effective prompt writing techniques that get professional results
Veo 3 is Google's newest AI video maker. It creates amazing videos from text descriptions. But you need to write good prompts to get the best results.
This guide will teach you how to write prompts that create stunning videos.
What Makes Veo 3 Special?
Veo 3 can do three amazing things:
Make high-quality videos from text
Add speech and dialogue
Create sound effects and music
How to access Veo 3?
You can access Veo 3 at mitte.ai, a platform that releases new models earlier than others. It works in Europe, supports image-to-video, too.
The 4 Best Practices for Writing Prompts
1. Use Precise Language
When writing prompts, be very specific and precise with your words.
Always say exactly what you mean. You're talking to an AI, not a friend.
Common mistakes that cause problems:
Don't call a woman "girl" - say "woman" or "young woman"
Don't call an adult man "boy" - say "man" or "young man"
Don't use vague age terms when you mean adults
Why this matters: Safety detection systems can block your request if you use imprecise language. The AI takes your words literally.
Examples:
❌ Bad: "A girl cooking dinner"
✅ Good: "A young woman in early 20s cooking dinner"
❌ Bad: "A boy playing guitar"
✅ Good: "A young man in early 20s playing guitar"
2. Layer Your Prompts
Think of your prompt like building a sandwich. Start with the main ingredient, then add layers.
Start with the core action:
"A cat walking"
"Rain falling"
"A person cooking"
Then add technical details:
Camera angle (close-up, wide shot)
Lighting (bright, dim, golden hour)
Movement (slow motion, fast)
Add style elements:
Mood (happy, mysterious, dramatic)
Colors (vibrant, muted, black and white)
Genre (horror, romance, documentary)
Finally, add audio:
Background sounds
Music style
Dialogue
Example:
❌ Bad: "A dog running"
✅ Good: "A golden retriever running through a meadow at sunset, medium shot with warm lighting, tail wagging happily, birds chirping in the background"
3. Be Specific About Timing
Timing words help control how your video flows. Use these words to make your videos more engaging.
Slow timing words:
Gradual
Slowly
Gentle
Smooth
Flowing
Fast timing words:
Sudden
Quick
Rapid
Instant
Sharp
Rhythmic timing words:
Rhythmic
Steady
Pulsing
Beating
Repeating
Examples:
"A flower slowly blooming in time-lapse"
"A door suddenly slamming shut"
"Waves rhythmically crashing on the shore"
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4. Combine Technical and Creative Language
Mix camera terms with descriptive words. This gives you both technical control and creative freedom.
Camera terms to use:
Close-up, medium shot, wide shot
Low angle, high angle, bird's eye view
Handheld, steady cam, tracking shot
Zoom in, zoom out, pan left, pan right
Creative descriptions:
Emotions (joyful, mysterious, peaceful)
Textures (smooth, rough, silky, grainy)
Colors (emerald green, sunset orange, deep blue)
Atmosphere (foggy, bright, moody, ethereal)
Example combinations:
"Close-up of weathered hands kneading bread dough"
"Wide shot of a lonely lighthouse against stormy skies"
"Handheld camera following excited children through a carnival"
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4. Consider Cause and Effect
Think about how actions create reactions. This makes your videos feel more real and connected.
Action → Environment reaction:
"Wind blowing → leaves rustling"
"Rain falling → puddles forming"
"Fire burning → smoke rising"
Character → Object interaction:
"Person walking → footsteps in sand"
"Cat jumping → papers scattering"
"Child laughing → bubbles floating away"
Sound → Visual response:
"Thunder → lightning flash"
"Music playing → people dancing"
"Bell ringing → birds flying away"
Example: "A child blowing dandelion seeds, causing them to drift away in the breeze while the camera follows their floating path"
Step-by-Step Prompt Writing Process
Step 1: Choose Your Main Subject
Start simple. Pick one main thing to focus on.
A person
An animal
An object
A scene
Step 2: Add the Action
What is your subject doing?
Walking, running, sitting
Growing, falling, spinning
Opening, closing, moving
Step 3: Set the Scene
Where is this happening?
Kitchen, forest, beach, city
Time of day
Weather conditions
Step 4: Pick Your Camera Style
How do you want to film it?
Close-up for emotion
Wide shot for context
Moving camera for energy
Step 5: Add Style and Mood
What feeling do you want?
Happy and bright
Dark and mysterious
Calm and peaceful
Step 6: Include Audio
What sounds fit your scene?
Natural sounds (birds, wind, water)
Human sounds (talking, laughing, footsteps)
Music or effects
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Common Mistakes to Avoid
Too Vague
❌ "A person in a room"
✅ "A chef in a busy kitchen preparing pasta"
Too Complicated
❌ "A dragon flying through space while singing opera during a thunderstorm with robots dancing below"
✅ "A dragon soaring through clouds at sunset, wings beating rhythmically"
Missing Audio
❌ "A waterfall in the mountains"
✅ "A waterfall cascading down rocky cliffs with the sound of rushing water echoing"
No Timing
❌ "Flowers growing"
✅ "Flowers gradually blooming in morning sunlight"
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Example Prompts That Work Well
Nature Scene
"Medium shot of a red fox slowly walking through snow-covered pine trees at dawn, soft golden light filtering through branches, gentle wind rustling the trees, peaceful forest sounds"
Action Scene
"Handheld camera rapidly following a skateboarder down a city street, sudden jump over a fire hydrant, wheels clicking on pavement, urban sounds in the background"
Emotional Scene
"Close-up of elderly hands gradually opening an old photo album, warm lamp light, pages turning with soft rustling sounds, gentle nostalgic music"
Fantasy Scene
"Wide shot of a fairy tale castle emerging from morning mist, camera slowly zooming in, magical sparkles floating in the air, mystical wind chimes in the distance"
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Advanced Tips
Use Contrast
Mix different elements to create interest:
Slow action with fast music
Bright colors with dark shadows
Quiet sounds with busy visuals
Build Sequences
Think about what happens next:
Start wide, then zoom in
Begin quiet, then get louder
Show cause, then effect
Add Personality
Give your subjects character:
A "curious" cat
A "determined" runner
A "gentle" grandmother
Think Like a Director
Ask yourself:
What story am I telling?
What emotion do I want?
How should this feel?
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Troubleshooting Common Issues
Video Too Boring
Add movement (camera or subject)
Include audio elements
Use more descriptive words
Video Too Chaotic
Focus on one main action
Simplify your prompt
Remove extra elements
Poor Quality
Be more specific about lighting
Add camera type details
Describe the environment clearly
No Sound
Always include audio descriptions
Mention specific sounds
Add music or ambient noise
Practice Exercises
Exercise 1: Basic Prompt
Write a simple prompt with:
One subject
One action
One location
One sound
Exercise 2: Layered Prompt
Take your basic prompt and add:
Camera angle
Lighting
Mood
Timing word
Exercise 3: Cause and Effect
Write a prompt where:
One action causes another
The environment responds
Multiple things happen in sequence
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Final Tips for Success
Start simple - Master basic prompts first
Practice regularly - Try new combinations
Study good videos - See what works
Experiment - Don't be afraid to try new things
Keep notes - Save prompts that work well
Remember: Good prompts take practice. Start with simple ideas and gradually add more details as you get comfortable.
The key is being specific enough to guide the AI, but not so detailed that it gets confused. Find the right balance for your creative vision.
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Ready to Create?
Now you know how to write great Veo 3 prompts! Start with simple ideas and build up your skills. Soon you'll be creating amazing videos that look professional and engaging.
The most important thing is to have fun and keep experimenting. Every prompt you write teaches you something new about creating with AI.
Happy video making!