Kling 3.0 Motion Control Guide
Control exactly how subjects move, cameras track, and shots transition in Kling 3.0.
Kling 3.0's motion control system lets you dictate how subjects move through a scene, how the camera tracks them, and how shots transition in multi-shot sequences. Most users only scratch the surface — here's how to use the full system.
Subject motion basics
Kling 3.0 interprets motion verbs literally. "A woman walks slowly across a bridge" produces different output than "A woman strolls across a bridge." The model distinguishes between:
For shot-by-shot control, the Kling 3.0 Motion Brush lets you draw the exact path a subject should follow.
- Speed words: crawl, walk, jog, run, sprint — each maps to a distinct velocity
- Direction phrases: "from left to right," "toward camera," "away from camera," "in circles"
- Interaction verbs: "picks up," "sets down," "pushes," "pulls" — the model simulates the physics of object interaction
Layered motion
You can describe multiple simultaneous motions: "A chef chops vegetables with her right hand while stirring a pot with her left." Kling 3.0 handles up to three simultaneous distinct motions per subject before quality degrades.
Tip: When describing complex motion, put the primary action first. The model weights earlier phrases more heavily.
Camera movement keywords
Kling 3.0 responds to standard cinematography terms in your prompt:
| Keyword | Effect |
|---|---|
| pan left/right | Horizontal camera rotation |
| tilt up/down | Vertical camera rotation |
| dolly in/out | Camera moves forward/backward |
| zoom in/out | Lens zoom (no camera movement) |
| tracking shot | Camera follows subject laterally |
| crane up/down | Vertical camera movement |
| handheld | Subtle shake for documentary feel |
| static | Locked-off tripod shot |
Combining camera and subject motion
The key is separating camera description from subject description with clear sentence boundaries:
Good: "A man runs along a beach. The camera tracks him in a low-angle side shot, slowly pulling ahead."
Bad: "A man runs along a beach with the camera tracking low from the side pulling ahead."
The second version often confuses subject and camera motion. Use separate sentences.
Multi-shot motion control
Kling 3.0's multi-shot system supports up to 6 sequential shots. Each shot can have its own camera setup and subject action.
Shot list format
The most reliable format uses numbered shots:
`` Shot 1: Wide establishing shot of a city street at night. Static camera. Shot 2: Medium shot of a woman stepping out of a taxi. Camera at eye level. Shot 3: Close-up of her face as she looks up. Slow tilt up to reveal a neon sign. Shot 4: Over-the-shoulder shot as she walks toward a club entrance. ``
Transitions between shots
Kling 3.0 handles transitions automatically, but you can influence them:
- "Cut to" — hard cut (default)
- "Dissolve to" — crossfade between shots
- "Match cut to" — the model attempts to match composition between shots
- "Whip pan to" — fast camera blur transition
Match cuts are impressive when they work but inconsistent — use them for creative exploration, not for reliable production.
Motion intensity control
Kling 3.0 has an internal motion scale. You can influence it through language:
- Low motion: "subtle," "slight," "barely," "gentle"
- Medium motion: "steady," "smooth," "gradual"
- High motion: "rapid," "explosive," "violent," "chaotic"
For product shots where you want minimal motion — just slow rotation or a gentle camera drift — stack low-motion words: "A product sits on a clean white surface. The camera drifts very slowly, almost imperceptibly, in a subtle arc."
Common mistakes
- Over-prompting motion: Describing every frame leads to stiff, unnatural output. Describe the key motion and let the model fill in naturalistic detail.
- Conflicting directions: "Pan left while tracking the subject running right" confuses the model. Make sure camera and subject motion are physically compatible.
- Ignoring timing: In multi-shot sequences, each shot gets roughly equal screen time. If you need one shot longer than others, add detail to that shot's description to signal importance.
Practical workflow
- Start with a simple prompt to test the basic motion
- Add camera direction in a second pass
- Layer in motion intensity words to fine-tune
- For multi-shot, build one shot at a time before combining
This iterative approach saves credits and gives you better results than trying to nail a complex prompt on the first attempt.