Google just doubled down on its AI video ambitions. The tech giant announced it's doubling monthly AI credits for Google AI Ultra subscribers from 12,500 to 25,000, as its Flow filmmaking tool crosses 100 million videos created since May. The move signals Google's aggressive push to dominate the exploding AI video generation market.
Google just made its biggest bet yet on AI-generated video content. The company announced today it's doubling the monthly AI credits for Google AI Ultra subscribers, jumping from 12,500 to 25,000 credits as its Flow filmmaking tool reaches a stunning milestone of 100 million videos created since its May launch.
The timing couldn't be more strategic. As OpenAI prepares to launch Sora and Meta pushes forward with its own video generation capabilities, Google is throwing serious resources behind keeping creators locked into its ecosystem. "From personal stories and cinematic short films to innovative brand content, people have been crafting impressive clips in our AI filmmaking tool Flow," Google Product Manager Niv Govindaraju wrote in today's announcement.
[embedded image: Flow video creation interface showing the credit system]
The 100 million video milestone in just three months represents explosive adoption that puts Google squarely in the lead of the AI video race. For context, that's roughly 1.1 million videos created daily since Flow's debut. The credit doubling means users can now generate significantly more clips and scenes as they build complex narratives within the platform.
But Google isn't stopping at video. The expanded credits also work with Whisk, Google's experimental image generation tool that combines text and image prompts. Starting tomorrow, Whisk expands to 77 more countries, a massive geographic push that underscores Google's global content creation ambitions.
[video iframe: Demo of Flow creating a short film from text prompts]
The competitive implications are immediate. has been struggling to match the quality and speed of Google's video generation, while faces new pressure from a tech giant with unlimited compute resources. Industry analysts suggest Google's credit doubling effectively cuts the cost per video in half for subscribers, potentially triggering a price war in the premium AI creative tools space.