Honor is gearing up to launch the Honor 600 series next week, and while the hardware specs look promising, the software may be the real star of the show. Building on the foundation laid by the Honor 400 series, on which users generated over 13.4 million seconds of AI video, Honor is set to debut an upgraded version of its AI Image to Video feature with the upcoming devices.
On-device AI for better privacy and speed
Honor’s Image to Video 2.0 uses a unified multi-modal video generation model that will run entirely on the device. Unlike cloud-based tools that can be slow or raise privacy concerns, this engine processes everything locally. On top of that, Honor says the workflow is pretty straightforward, making it easy for users to get started.
With the feature, you’ll be able to provide the AI with one to three reference images and use natural language commands to describe the scene. You can dictate specific actions or have the AI fill in the blanks between a starting and ending frame. The feature will churn out a 3-to-8 second clip that will reportedly feel less like a slideshow and more like a professionally produced video.
How Honor is addressing glitches
One of the biggest hurdles for generative video is visual consistency. AI often makes mistakes when trying to render objects from different angles, leading to warping or glitches. Honor says it has tackled this with multi-angle subject construction. By understanding the 3D structure of a subject from 2D images, the model maintains consistency even during complex camera movements.
For beginners, the Honor 600 series will also offer templates for professional cinematic techniques, such as Hitchcock zoom, Bullet time, and world-transformation effects. And to ensure the tool is not buried deep in the settings, the devices will feature a dedicated physical AI button.
With the reveal just a week away, Honor is clearly positioning the 600 series as a handheld production studio rather than just another affordable flagship phone. How the updated AI Image to Video 2.0 feature performs in the real world remains to be seen.






