Study concrete Happy Horse prompt patterns backed by local demo videos and reference assets. Each example shows how scene, camera movement, timing, and continuity are written for motion-first generation.
These examples come from the site's stored Happy Horse video example dataset. Look for the parts that travel well: shot setup, action timing, reference preservation, lighting, and camera direction.
The most useful examples are not keyword lists. They are directed scene briefs that tell the model what should change over time.
For image-to-video, identify what the source frame must preserve before adding motion or style changes.
Use direct language such as slow push-in, wide tracking shot, aerial follow, or locked-off close-up when the shot depends on it.
Strong examples explain what happens across seconds, including expression shifts, background motion, and pacing.
This page describes the working site experience and local examples. It does not claim official API status, open-source availability, or provider endorsement.
Use these notes to interpret the examples without treating them as official model documentation.
Open the Happy Horse creation flow, adapt an example prompt, and check pricing when you need credits for new generations.