Kling 2.1 Master Prompt Guide: Formula, Tips & Best Practices
You’ve probably experienced this. You write a prompt for Kling. You hit generate. The video comes out… but it’s not what you imagined. The motion feels stiff. The lighting looks flat. The camera doesn’t move. You just wasted 100 credits.
You’re not alone. 99% of Kling creators face this exact problem. They generate video after video, and the results stay disappointing. Why? They don’t understand how to write Kling 2.1 Master prompts the right way.
Kling 2.1 Master is incredibly powerful. It can create Hollywood-level videos. But power without direction goes nowhere. This guide teaches you the formula, real examples, and proven strategies that actually work — so you stop wasting credits and start creating videos that match your vision.
What Is KLing 2.1 Master
Kling is Kuaishou’s own AI platform for creative production. Since its first launch in June 2024, the model has moved quickly from version 1.0 to 2.1, gaining major upgrades along the way. Today, Kling 2.1 Master represents the most advanced and polished version.
Kling 2.1 Master is made for professional work like filmmaking and advertising. It brings big improvements in both quality and control. The model can produce sharp 1080p videos and does a much better job simulating soft and fluid motion. Movements like muscles shifting as a character runs, a dress flowing during a spin, or hair moving in the wind show a level of detail that feels close to film production.
This version is also smarter with prompts. It understands complex instructions and reacts to them with precision. Whether you want a certain camera move, a specific character action, or a particular lighting style, Kling 2.1 Master is built to match the creator’s intent with a high degree of accuracy.
How to Write Kling 2.1 Text-to-Video Prompts
Prompt Formula
Prompt = Subject (Subject Description) + Subject Movement + Scene (Scene Description) + (Camera Language + Lighting + Atmosphere)
Tips
Subject: What is the main focus?
The subject is the primary focus of your video. It’s what viewers’ eyes go to first. Your subject can be a person, animal, object, vehicle, or landscape. Keep it specific. Don’t just say “person”—decide who they are.
Example: “A professional chef” not just “a person”
Subject Description: What do they look like?
This is where you provide visual details. Describe appearance, clothing, facial features, body posture, and any distinctive characteristics. Think like a camera—what would the lens capture? Use short, clear sentences. The more specific you are, the more accurately Kling understands what to create.
Details to include:
- Hair (color, style, length)
- Clothing (what they wear, colors, fit)
- Facial features (expression, distinctive marks)
- Body type and posture
- Age range
- Any special characteristics
Example: “A woman with long dark hair, wearing a navy blazer and white shirt, sitting upright with a confident expression”
Subject Movement: What are they doing?
Describe the action or motion. This is what happens during your 5-10 second video. Keep it straightforward and realistic — if it would take 20 seconds in real life, it’s too complex. Include emotional tone through descriptive words.
Important: Motion should be achievable within your video duration.
Example: “She takes an enthusiastic bite of her coffee, then smiles genuinely” (realistic for 5 seconds)
NOT: “She walks across the room, sits down, orders coffee, drinks it, pays, and leaves” (too much for 5 seconds)
Scene: Where does this happen?
The scene is your setting. It’s the environment surrounding your subject. Choose a clear location—restaurant, beach, office, forest, bedroom, street, etc. Keep it simple and specific.
Example: “An upscale restaurant”
Scene Description: What does the environment look like?
Fill in the details about your setting. What’s in the space? What time of day is it? What’s the mood? Use a few short sentences. You’re painting a complete picture without overwhelming the viewer.
Details to consider:
- Time of day (morning, sunset, night)
- Weather or lighting conditions
- Objects and furniture in the space
- Other people in the background
- Overall color and mood
- Architectural or design details
Example: “Upscale restaurant with white tablecloths, warm ambient lighting, other elegant diners slightly blurred in the background, sophisticated decor”
Camera Language: How is this filmed? (Optional but powerful)
This is how the camera moves, angles, and frames your shot. Good camera work transforms ordinary videos into cinematic ones. You’re essentially directing the camera.
Kling-supported camera techniques include:
- Ultra-wide angle shots
- Close-ups and extreme close-ups
- Background blur (bokeh effect)
- Telephoto/long lens shots
- Low-angle and high-angle shots
- Overhead/top-down shots
- Aerial/drone shots
- Pan (horizontal movement)
- Tilt (vertical movement)
- Zoom in or zoom out
- Tracking shots (following motion)
- Depth of field effects
Example: “The camera slowly pulls back to reveal the full scene” or “Close-up shot with background blur”
Lighting: What’s the mood? (Optional)
Lighting controls the emotional tone. Light and shadow can make scenes feel warm, cold, dramatic, serene, or mysterious. Describe the type and quality of light.
Types to consider:
- Natural light (sunlight, moonlight)
- Golden hour (sunset/sunrise)
- Studio lighting
- Ambient lighting
- Dramatic/harsh lighting
- Soft/diffused lighting
Example: “Soft golden-hour lighting casting long shadows” or “Warm, dim ambient lighting”
Atmosphere: What’s the overall feeling? (Optional)
Atmosphere is the emotional vibe and overall tone. It guides Kling toward your creative direction. Use adjectives that describe the mood and style.
Example: “Cinematic, professional, sophisticated” or “Playful, energetic, fun”
How to Write Kling 2.1 Image-to-Video Prompts
Prompt Formula
Prompt = Subject + Movement, Background + Movement …
Tips
- Subject: The main focus of your video. Can be people, animals, plants, objects, or any element in your image that should move or change.
- Movement: What happens to the subject. This is the action or motion during your 5-10 second video.
- Background: The environment or scene in your image. It typically stays relatively fixed unless you specifically want it to change.
- Background Movement: Optional — if you want elements in the background to move or change (like flowing water, swaying trees, moving people).
Key Difference from Text-to-Video
The biggest difference: Your image already provides the scene and appearance details. So you don’t need to describe what things look like — just what should move or change. This makes image-to-video prompts simpler and more action-focused.
Examples:
- The smartphone rotates 360 degrees slowly, pausing briefly at the side to showcase the camera, then returns to center position
- Woman nods her head gently, maintains eye contact with camera, and smiles warmly
- Cat stretches and yawns, then bird flutters wings and hops to the right
- Tree leaves sway gently in the wind, branches move slightly, while the tree trunk remains still
From Perfect Kling Prompts to Multi-Platform Distribution
Most creators don’t stop at one video or one account. You likely manage multiple accounts across different platforms — TikTok, Instagram, YouTube, and more. You want to distribute your AI videos to all of them efficiently.
This creates a new problem.
The Multi-Account Challenge
Manually uploading videos to 5, 10, or 20 accounts is brutally time-consuming. But there’s something worse: account bans.
When you upload from multiple devices or computers without proper isolation, platforms detect patterns. They use device fingerprinting technology to identify connections between accounts. If they suspect you’re running multiple accounts from the same device or IP, they shadowban you — your videos get no views. Maybe worse, they can permanently ban your entire account network.
The All-in-One Solution
GeeLark solves both problems at the same time.
It is a cloud-based platform that brings AI video generation and safe account management together. You can create AI videos directly inside GeeLark using its AIGC tools. After that, you use GeeLark’s cloud phones to manage your accounts without risk.
Each cloud phone runs a real Android system. Every device has its own IP address when you connect a proxy It also has its own device fingerprint. This keeps your accounts fully separate, no matter whether they are used in the United States, India, Brazil, or anywhere else.

Finally, GeeLark’s automation features handle the posting. Set your schedule, choose your accounts, and GeeLark publishes your videos automatically — 24/7, while you sleep.
The Complete Workflow
Step 1: Set Up Your Accounts
Create cloud phone profiles in GeeLark. For each profile, configure a proxy to give it a unique IP address. Launch the cloud phone, then install TikTok, Instagram, YouTube, or other apps — just like setting up a real phone. Log into your accounts on each cloud phone.

Step 2: Generate Your Video
Go to Library → AI to begin. Choose Text-to-video or Image-to-video first. After that, pick the model you want, such as Veo3, Seedance, or Kling 2.1 Master. Then set your resolution and video length.
Note: The cost of generating a video depends on the duration you choose.
Write your prompt using everything you just learned. Click Submit. Your video generates automatically and saves to the Library.

Step 3: Automate Publishing
Now your videos are ready and your accounts are set up in cloud phones. It’s time to publish.
- Go to GeeLark’s Automation section. Pick a template like TikTok video posting (Instagram and YouTube templates are also available).

- Choose which cloud phone profile you want to use (the cloud phone where your TikTok account is logged in).
- Next, select your creative materials. You can pick one video and post it to multiple TikTok accounts, or select several videos from your Library to post each to specific accounts, in your chosen order.
- For each video, set the posting time, title, cover (optional), and script.
- When you’re ready, click Confirm publication. GeeLark will handle the rest — automatically and securely posting your videos as scheduled.

Master Your Kling 2.1 Prompts and Scale Your Content
You now know how to write perfect Kling 2.1 Master prompts that produce cinematic, professional videos. You understand the formula, the differences between text-to-video and image-to-video, and the exact techniques that separate great prompts from mediocre ones.
But if you’re managing multiple accounts across different platforms, mastering prompts alone isn’t enough. You need the right tools to distribute safely and efficiently. That’s where GeeLark comes in — it combines AI video generation, isolated cloud phones, and automated publishing in one platform. Your videos stay consistent, your accounts stay safe, and your content reaches your audience on schedule.
Ready to scale your content operation?








