Free Tool

Sora 2 Prompt Builder

A free Sora prompt generator for OpenAI Sora 2. Build a structured prompt with synced audio, lip-synced dialogue, and multi-shot continuity — then copy it into your generator.

Synced audio & dialogue (Sora 2)

medium close-up, slow push-in, portrait 85mm lens, golden hour light, cinematic mood. Aspect ratio 16:9. Duration 8s.

How Sora differs from Veo: Sora rewards synced audio/dialogue beats and explicit shot-continuity notes for multi-shot scenes. This builder is a structured scaffold, not a live model — it writes the prompt string, it does not call Sora. Your draft saves to your own browser only.

What this Sora prompt generator does

This Sora prompt generator turns a few fields into a structured Sora 2 prompt and a copy-ready spec. You describe the subject, action, and setting, then pick a camera move, lens, lighting, and mood from bundled vocabulary. The tool assembles those into the prose order Sora reads best.

The output is a structured scaffold, not a finished render. It is text you paste into a generator — the tool does not call Sora and is not a live language model. Everything runs in your browser, and your draft saves only to your own device.

The two fields that make a Sora 2 prompt different

Sora 2 is not a silent video model with a different name. Two capabilities change how you should write the prompt, and this builder surfaces both as dedicated fields instead of burying them in a single free-text box.

Synced audio and lip-synced dialogue

Sora 2 generates a soundtrack and can lip-sync a spoken line to a character's mouth. That means a prompt can carry three audio layers: a spoken line, an ambient bed, and discrete sound effects. The builder writes each one under a clear label so the model reads your sentence as speech, not as on-screen caption text.

Keep the spoken line short and natural — roughly what a person could say in the shot's duration. A single believable sentence lip-syncs far better than a paragraph crammed into eight seconds. The ambient bed and sound effects set the scene's acoustic space without competing with the line.

Multi-shot continuity

Sora handles short sequences of cuts, not just one continuous take. The continuity mode writes one locked sentence describing your subject, wardrobe, and setting, then instructs the model to keep that identical across every shot. Each shot only changes the action, the camera move, and an optional line.

That locked sentence is the part you should not paraphrase between shots. Re-describing the character in fresh words is what causes the face and wardrobe to drift mid-sequence. The builder repeats the look verbatim so the cut stays coherent from shot one to shot four.

How to write a Sora prompt that lands

Lead with a concrete subject. "A barista with short dark hair and a green apron" gives Sora a specific person to render; "someone cool" does not. The more grounded the noun, the less the model has to guess, and the closer the first take lands to the brief.

Pair the action with a clear arc. A verb that implies a beginning and an end — "steams milk, then looks up and smiles" — gives the model a midpoint to render toward. Static descriptions tend to produce a held pose rather than motion across the clip.

Place camera, lens, and lighting after the action. Sora reads cinematic language well, so name a specific move and a specific light source rather than asking for "good cinematography." The lens slot controls depth of field and compression, which is where much of the cinematic feel comes from.

Finish with mood, aspect ratio, and duration. The mood word colors the grade and pacing, while the explicit aspect ratio and duration keep the output framed and timed for where it will run. For more on cinematic camera and lens language, the Playcut video generator page covers the moves Sora reads best.

Where Sora fits among AI video models

Sora 2 is one strong option, not the only one. Veo, Kling, and Runway each have a different sweet spot, and the prompt grammar shifts between them. Picking the model that fits the shot matters as much as the prompt itself, which is the whole idea behind a multi-model studio.

Playcut routes prompts across these models from one chat surface, so you can build a Sora-style prompt here and run it — or its Veo or Kling equivalent — without juggling separate accounts. See how the routing works on the Playcut AI models page, then try the same prompt in the studio to compare takes.

If you mostly compare tools, building the same scene in more than one model is the fastest way to learn which suits your style. The Veo prompt builder mirrors this one for Google Veo, and the video generator runs whichever model fits the shot.

Cost reality: rendering a Sora-style prompt

The prompt is free to write; the render costs credits wherever you run it. Tightening the prompt before you generate is the cheapest way to cut re-rolls, because every off-brief take is a job you pay for and discard. A clear subject, one strong line, and a locked look do more for your budget than any single setting.

Playcut plans start at $9/mo (Hobby, 500 credits) and run through Pro at $29/mo (2,000 credits), Studio at $79/mo (6,000 credits, 4 seats), and Agency at $149/seat/mo (10,000 credits per seat). Credit packs that never expire add 600 credits for $9 up to 5,000 for $65. Pricing is current as of May 2026.

Frequently asked questions

What is a Sora prompt generator and does it write the video?

A Sora prompt generator helps you assemble a structured text prompt for OpenAI's Sora 2 video model. This one builds the prompt string and a copy-ready spec from your fields — it does not generate the video and does not call Sora. It is a deterministic scaffold from fixed vocabulary tables, not a live language model. You copy the prompt and paste it into a Sora-capable surface to render.

How is this different from a Veo prompt builder?

Two Sora-specific things. Sora 2 generates synced audio, so there is a dedicated section for a lip-synced spoken line, an ambient bed, and sound effects. Sora also handles short multi-shot sequences, so a continuity mode reuses one locked subject and look while only the action and camera change. The Veo prompt builder leaves both out.

Should I include dialogue in a Sora 2 prompt?

Yes, when you want a character to speak. Sora 2 can lip-sync a short line and build a matching soundtrack, which is its biggest advantage over silent video models. Keep the line short and natural — one or two sentences a person could say in the shot's duration. The builder labels it as lip-synced dialogue so the model treats it as speech.

How do I keep the same character across multiple Sora shots?

Switch to multi-shot continuity mode. The builder writes one locked sentence describing your subject, wardrobe, and setting, then repeats the instruction to keep that subject identical across every shot. Each shot only changes the action, camera move, and optional line. For a face reused across many videos, saving a Playcut Actor is the most reliable path.

Can I save my Sora prompts?

Your current draft saves automatically to your own browser's local storage, so it survives a refresh, and nothing is uploaded. For shared, brand-locked prompt presets and team folders, the Playcut studio keeps a prompt library tied to your workspace and brand kits — the upgrade path once a prompt becomes part of a repeatable workflow.

Run your prompt across the best model

Playcut routes your prompt to the right video model and manages credits for you. See the lineup on the Playcut AI models page or generate this scene now in the studio.