- Google's Veo3 Fast generates 720p AI videos twice as fast as standard
- Gemini Pro users can create three videos per day
- Flow Pro users pay just 20 credits per clip
There are strawberries made of glass that someone cuts out as if they were made of jelly, and the same happens to some other berries and pokemon's carizards. The woman dips the tongs in a large platter of melted rock and chews them on a waffle and then chews them.
These are not cough-induced hallucinations. This is the latest trend in ASMR videos created with Google's VEO 3 and other AI movie generators.
You may have seen these and other strange videos in the Tiktok algorithm. I am not the biggest supporter of ASMR videos, nor the biggest supporter of their kind whispers, rhythmic tapping, and other soap audio, but I understood the appeal. I'm not sure if the AI version is equally good. These are not traditional low FI LO-FI tapping and brush videos.
Google Veo is undoubtedly the most popular choice for ASMR's AI video generators. It creates a video with an artificial gloss that lacks the error and inaccuracy that is characteristic of artificial ASMR, as good as a model to create a realistic video (in this case, for the specific value of realism).
My friend, a much bigger fan of ASMR, claims it's not just the sounds and voices that seduce them. It's the intimacy and immediacy they like. I said “Tingle Triggers” is in AI Video, but that's not the same.
AI ASMR
But that is not a universal opinion. These videos have won millions of views. The comments are full of both excitement and confusion, and cannot explain why they prefer videos or anyone who is surprised to see who can't stop watching them.
Some of the appeal may be new. The new ones have a fanbase for at least a while. Veo's video quality is different from what most people have seen before. It mimics natural lighting, shadows and realistic camera movements. They are all generated by AI, so the perfect glass statue of Pokemon that can be easily cut in half is certainly an eye-catching person.
I wonder if people who are looking for a pure ASMR experience will choose AI videos, just as much as they are fun. Sound may scratch that hearing itch, but I wonder what they are included in my list of my favorite ASMR videos.
Not all AI trends make sense. Some of them are very not. AI ASMR may have a niche location throughout the ASMR ecosystem. Still, I don't think the majority of people fall asleep in sweet whispers would prefer the sound of simulated glass shattering under an invisible knife.
