GEMINI OMNI PROMPTS

VFX

16:9 7s Particle convergence + push

vfx

Abstract Logo Reveal — Particle Formation (Text-Safe)

Why literal logo reveals fail in Omni, and the particle-formation pattern that gets you a brand-ready reveal with the wordmark composited in post.

logo-reveal particles motion-graphics branding intro

Prompt

Create a 7-second 16:9 motion-graphics video in one continuous shot.
Thousands of glowing golden particles drift through darkness, then converge toward
the center of frame, forming a bright abstract circular emblem that pulses once and
holds. Slow push in as they converge. Deep black background, subtle lens glow.

Why this prompt

Let’s start with the uncomfortable truth: you cannot prompt Omni to reveal your actual logo. Wordmarks are text, and text rendering is the most severe documented failure mode — letterforms smear and warp frame to frame (PixVerse). Every “AI logo reveal” tutorial that types a brand name into the prompt ships a smeared result. This prompt is the honest workaround, and it’s how motion designers actually work anyway: generate the energy — particles converging into an abstract emblem — and composite your real vector wordmark over the final hold in any editor.

Source tier: 🟡 Pattern-composed (medium confidence — built from documented camera vocabulary and verified failure modes, output not yet video-verified)

The structure borrows the trigger-pattern thinking used for VFX transformations: a clear before-state (drifting particles), a described transformation (converge, form, pulse), and a hold — giving the edit a natural landing frame for your composited logo. The pulses once and holds beat is doing real work: it creates the sync point.

How to tweak

  • Brand palette: golden → your primary brand color; add a hex code (particles in #FF6B35) — hex codes are part of the documented product-workflow vocabulary (Atlas Cloud).
  • Emblem geometry: circular emblemhexagonal emblem, shield shape, rising diamond — pick a shape adjacent to your actual mark so the composite feels continuous.
  • Energy level: drift... converge is elegant; swarm violently, then snap into formation reads tech/gaming. Keep the transformation verbs but retune their intensity.
  • Square and vertical crops: 1:1 for profile videos, 9:16 for Shorts intros — center-framed convergence survives any crop, which is exactly why it’s centered.
  • Second turn for the outro: ask a follow-up edit for the emblem dissolves back into particles and scatters with a “keep everything else identical” lock — now you have matching intro and outro bumpers from one session.

Common failure modes

  • Typing any brand name or letters into the prompt. The whole premise: don’t. Even “particles form the letter M” produces a warped M. Abstract emblem + post composite is the pattern.
  • Over-specified particle counts or physics. “Exactly 10,000 particles with realistic gravity” is decoration the model can’t honor — the 50-word focus ceiling is better spent on the convergence beats (Seaart).
  • Multiple formation events. Form-dissolve-reform-again in one clip is choreography the 10-second cap can’t fit cleanly — one transformation per clip, chain in Flow (TechCrunch on the cap).
  • Busy backgrounds. A gradient or environment behind the particles competes with your composited wordmark later. Deep black (or deep brand-dark) keeps the composite clean and hides generation noise.

Notes

  • Composite tip: place your vector logo at the emblem’s pulse frame, matching the glow color, then fade the generated emblem 10–20% under it — the generated light does the integration for you.
  • Output carries a SynthID watermark — fine for intros; crop-sensitive brands should check placement against their safe areas.
  • For a full VFX transformation of an object (not an emblem), the magical portal prompt covers the trigger pattern in depth.

Sources

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