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Kling (Kuaishou) for AI video on Yollomi: 2.1 vs motion-control routes

Kling shines for human motion. Your costs explode if you do not lock duration, aspect ratio, and the required input fields first.

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Yollomi AI Team
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Kling (Kuaishou) for AI video on Yollomi: 2.1 vs motion-control routes

When Kling is the first phone call

Kling (Kuaishou) is frequently used for human-centric motion—dance, runway-style shots, and dramatic camera moves. On Yollomi, you may see Kling 2.1 and Kling v2.6 Motion Control-class entries under AI video with different input schemas and per-second economics.

Always read the on-card requirements and current credit table—do not assume a single global price.


Not “2.1 vs 2.6 = better” — different I/O, different stories

  • 2.1-style routes often start from a start frame / image conditioning for i2v (verify the form).
  • Motion control-style routes can trade money for controllability when you have reference motion—treat that as a director tool, not a default.

Make acceptance cheap

  • Lock duration + aspect before polishing prose.
  • Prefer shot language (wide/medium, push vs pan, speed) over adjectives.
  • Many “cinematic” results are still post-edited—plan multi-clip coverage.

Disclaimer: Trademarks belong to their owners. Yollomi’s live catalog and pricing are authoritative.

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