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Kling 2.6 Motion Control AI Video Generator

What is Kling 2.6 Motion Control?

Kling 2.6 Motion Control is a reference-to-video workflow that combines a single subject image with a single motion video. Instead of describing movement only with text, you transfer the pose rhythm and performance pattern from the motion clip into the generated character.

One subject image plus one motion video

Kling 2.6 Motion Control requires one image URL and one video URL per request. The image should clearly show the subject's head, shoulders, and torso. The motion video should also clearly show that same body region so the model can map posture, gestures, and timing correctly.

Built for controllable character movement

This model is strongest when movement fidelity matters more than open-ended scene invention. You can preserve dance timing, hand motions, upper-body gestures, and performance rhythm while changing character style, clothing, or world details with a text prompt.

Resolution and orientation control

Resolution and orientation control

Kling 2.6 Motion Control supports 720p and 1080p output modes, plus a character orientation setting that can follow either the reference image or the motion video. That matters when the pose source and the subject portrait point in different directions.

Practical limits that affect quality

Practical limits that affect quality

The official workflow supports JPEG, PNG, or JPG images up to 10MB and MP4, QuickTime, or Matroska motion videos up to 100MB with a duration between 3 and 30 seconds. Shorter, cleaner clips with visible torso movement generally produce more stable results.

How to use Kling 2.6 Motion Control

The reliable workflow is simple: start with a clear subject image, pair it with one motion reference, then only use the prompt to refine styling and scene details.

Upload a clear subject image

Choose one image that clearly shows the subject's head, shoulders, and torso. Avoid heavy crops, tiny faces, or extreme perspective because the model needs enough body structure to map motion cleanly.

Upload one motion reference video

Use one 3 to 30 second motion clip that clearly shows the performer movement you want to transfer. Cleaner framing and readable gestures usually work better than fast cuts, occlusions, or dramatic camera shake.

Set orientation, quality, and prompt intent

Choose whether orientation should follow the image or the motion video, then pick 720p or 1080p. Use the prompt to describe character style, clothing, environment, and finishing details instead of trying to override the motion pattern itself.

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Why use the dedicated Kling 2.6 motion-control page

Reference-only workflow clarity

This route removes text and image mode noise and focuses only on the real Kling 2.6 motion-control flow. That makes it easier for teams to understand what files are needed before they start generating.

Better motion transfer expectations

The strongest outputs usually come from clean torso visibility, readable hands, and stable camera framing in the motion clip. This page explains those boundaries up front so users can prepare better inputs and waste fewer credits.

Useful for dance, gesture, and mascot clips

Kling 2.6 Motion Control works well for animated portraits, dance performance remaps, stylized fitness clips, and brand characters that need repeatable gestures. It is a strong fit when the movement source matters more than fully new choreography.

Prompt refines style, not motion truth

The prompt still matters, but mainly for identity, wardrobe, lighting, setting, and finishing style. The motion video remains the main source of action timing, so this workflow is easier to steer than prompt-only animation.

Supports 720p and 1080p output

Use 720p for faster iteration and 1080p when you want a cleaner final export. This mirrors the official mode choices and gives teams a practical explore-first, finish-second workflow.

Aligned with the official KIE request contract

The page is wired to the official Kling 2.6 motion-control effect, which expects one subject image in input_urls and one motion clip in video_urls. That keeps the page copy aligned with the actual runtime payload.

Kling 2.6 Motion Control FAQ

Direct answers about Kling 2.6 Motion Control inputs, limits, and best-fit use cases.

It requires one subject image and one motion reference video. The image should clearly show the subject's head, shoulders, and torso. The motion video should also clearly show those body areas so the model can transfer movement accurately.