Animate human motion with MiniMax Hailuo 2.3, now available on Freepik

MiniMax Hailuo 2.3 is now available in the Freepik Video Generator. This new video model is included in all plans and brings structure, expression, and clarity to full-body animation. It handles choreography, performance, and complex movement with precision, and adapts to different creative workflows through two distinct modes.

 

Movement that holds up across frames

MiniMax Hailuo 2.3 handles advanced movement patterns with consistency; spins, landings, transitions, and directional shifts stay stable across frames. Timing and joint coordination remain clear, even in multi-step choreography or full-body motion sequences.

 

Choose your pace

Available in 2 modes, you can explore both and stick to the following info to start with:

  1. MiniMax Hailuo 2.3 Standard mode is built for polished scenes. It maintains facial structure, motion detail, and emotional continuity across long takes.
  2. MiniMax Hailuo 2.3 Fast mode delivers quicker yet precise outputs, making it useful for trying prompt variations or producing large sets of iterations without losing structure.

Both modes support the same features, style controls, and video tools. You decide the tempo based on the stage of your workflow.

Cinematic effects and adaptive styling

Visual effects elements such as light, particles, and environment respond to the action on screen. These effects are integrated into the scene, not applied afterward.

Visual style can also evolve within a single clip, switching from realism to anime, surreal filters, or stylized looks without breaking continuity. Transitions stay fluid. Styling remains in context.

Upgrades from previous models

Compared to MiniMax Hailuo 02 and earlier versions, this release includes:

  • More reliable facial and body coherence
  • Improved interpretation of choreography, motion flow, and camera cues
  • Better support for animated type and logo movement
  • Subtle emotional changes through micro-expression tracking

These updates reduce the need for regeneration and provide more stable outputs for storytelling and performance-based scenes.

For creators working with motion

This model has already been used to build choreography breakdowns, branded motion, character animation, and physical performance tests. It supports exploration and delivery, without forcing a trade-off between speed and quality.