Start from one person photo
Upload a clear selfie or portrait so the workflow can preserve the face, hairstyle, body shape, and outfit details.
Upload one photo and create a viral video where you enter the TV and score in a football match.
Three generated examples show the living-room first frame, screen vortex, stadium transition, centered subject, and clear final goal beat used by the effect.
Upload a clear selfie or portrait so the workflow can preserve the face, hairstyle, body shape, and outfit details.
The image stage builds a realistic night living-room phone photo with the subject watching a football broadcast.
The video stage keeps the living-room image as the first frame, pulls the subject into the TV, and follows the shot into the net.
Use a source image where the face is readable and the outfit is visible enough to carry into the stadium sequence.
Choose 9:16 for TikTok, Reels, Shorts, and phone-screen football edits, or 16:9 when you want a wider living-room and stadium frame.
The subject should stay in their original outfit after entering the match; regenerate if Kling turns the person into a jersey or team uniform.
Use consented photos for real people, especially because the result preserves identity in a fictional sports scene.
Turn a fan photo into a match-day fantasy where they go from watching the screen to taking the decisive shot.
Create a sports transition with stadium atmosphere, defenders, goalkeeper reaction, and a visible goal finish.
Use the living-room-to-stadium jump as a quick visual punchline for football memes, match predictions, or victory posts.
Test the same person across different source photos while keeping the two-stage structure and football physics constraints stable.
Start with one clear photo and generate a two-step video that keeps the selected aspect ratio from the living-room first frame into the stadium goal scene.
Choose a selfie, portrait, or full-body image with a readable face and visible clothing so the workflow can preserve identity and outfit.
Tip: Avoid heavy filters, cropped faces, mirror selfies, logos, or text overlays.
The first stage creates a realistic smartphone photo of the person watching a football match on a large TV at night.
Tip: If the subject is too far from the TV or no longer recognizable, retry with a sharper source image.
The second stage animates the person touching the TV, entering the stadium, kicking the ball, and scoring before you preview or download the result.
Tip: Regenerate if the ball disappears, the outfit changes, or the stadium becomes too empty.
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