One scene priority
The model usually responds better when the prompt has one dominant event or shot idea instead of several competing moments.
LTX 2.3 Best Prompts
The best LTX 2.3 prompts are usually not the most complicated ones. They are the prompts that hold the scene together, produce a clear visual priority, and stay easy to iterate.
This page focuses on proven starting points you can adapt in browser, especially when you want a faster route than building a full local workflow on day one.
The model usually responds better when the prompt has one dominant event or shot idea instead of several competing moments.
Strong prompts say what changes on screen. They do not rely on vague labels like dynamic, cinematic, or epic to carry the action.
Even a short phrase like slow push-in, fixed frame, or side tracking shot gives the output more direction.
If you want the full prompt logic behind these patterns, start with the prompt guide. If you want to test them fast, the browser-first online page is the next step.
Luxury skincare bottle on a wet stone surface, gentle push-in camera, soft morning light, subtle water movement, premium beauty commercial mood, minimal background distraction.
Young chef plating a dish in a quiet open kitchen, medium close-up, calm hand movement, warm tungsten highlights, shallow depth feel, understated cinematic realism.
Fog rolling over pine trees around a mountain cabin at dawn, slow rising drone-like camera, cool blue light, soft wind in the branches, contemplative cinematic tone.
Fresh croissant breaking open on a marble counter, quick close-up reveal, visible steam, crisp bakery lighting, satisfying food detail, short-form premium ad style.
This order keeps the prompt legible. It also makes editing easier because you can see which part needs refinement.
Walking, pouring, turning, lifting, revealing, and drifting usually do more than dramatic, vivid, or engaging on their own.
When a prompt works, keep the structure and only replace the scene-specific nouns. That makes it easier to scale into repeatable workflows in aicovea.
Related Guides
Yes, but the core structure is similar across genres. Commercial, cinematic, and social prompts still benefit from a clear subject, motion path, and camera instruction.
A strong prompt survives small variations. If minor edits still produce coherent output, the underlying prompt structure is probably doing its job.
Only if you need automation or workflow control. For many users, the better next move is to keep refining and reusing the prompt in a browser workflow.