Factsheet
November 17, 2025; 1 month ago (2025-11-17)
Grok 4.1 Thinking /
November 17, 2025; 1 month ago (2025-11-17)
Grok 4.1 Fast /
November 19, 2025; 58 days ago (2025-11-19)
November 17, 2025; 1 month ago (2025-11-17)
Grok 4.1 Thinking /
November 17, 2025; 1 month ago (2025-11-17)
Grok 4.1 Fast /
November 19, 2025; 58 days ago (2025-11-19)
In the News
Videos
Every single grok imagine generated videos and their uploaded images are publicly accessible for anyone with a link. There is no option for the user to turn link sharing off and there is no option for the user to delete the entry as well.
such a wierd choice to make it this way i guess...
How’s the review? I heard it’s better than sora and Gemini ?
Any way to test it before getting supergrok subscription?
It seems that Elon Musk is becoming generous for the first time in years since not only has he released Grok 4 Free (although originally, unfairly, you had to pay to use this new model) but also Imagine the version of Grok to create images and videos with sound (almost at the level of Veo 3) has finally also come out free which is something for which we must thank Elon Musk a lot for these free samples of generosity
I’ve been testing Grok Imagine for the past few days and wrote up a beginner-friendly guide, but I wanted to share the core takeaways here so you don’t need to click anything to get value.
What it does well
Fast feedback loop: images usually return in seconds, which makes prompt iteration less painful.
Short videos with audio: capped at 6 seconds right now, good enough for quick concept previews and social snippets.
Solid for edits: uploading a photo and using text to tweak background/elements works better than I expected for simple changes.
Prompt tips that saved me time
Add action + lighting + style: “a rainy alley at night, neon reflections, handheld film look” outperforms “cyberpunk alley.”
Use constraints: specify framing (“medium shot”), era (“1970s color film”), lens cues (“35mm”), or texture (“matte finish”) to avoid generic output.
Iterate in small steps: one change per retry (lighting first, then subject pose, then background), rather than rewriting the whole prompt.
Where it stumbles
Motion artifacts: human movement and fine hand details can get weird in videos—plan around tight close-ups on faces/hands.
Overly busy scenes: dense crowds or complex action in one frame often lose coherence; simpler compositions look cleaner.
Style drift: when stacking too many style cues, the model can flatten to something safer—dial back and reintroduce cues gradually.
Content guardrails
There is a “spicy” mode, but the boundaries are strict—expect blocks or blurs for anything that crosses the line.
If you’re editing real people, be mindful of consent and policy—misuse can get you flagged, and it’s just not worth it.
Practical uses that felt legit
Storyboarding: quick frames to communicate tone, props, and lighting before committing time to a full render or shoot.
Concept previews: rough visual directions for clients or teammates to react to (saves long back-and-forth).
Educational visuals: simple diagrams or scene recreations where photorealism isn’t critical.
If you want the full walkthrough with prompt templates and a short checklist, I put it here as a supplemental resource: https://aigptjournal.com/explore-ai/ai-guides/grok-imagine-beginner-guide/
What’s your take on Grok Imagine so far?