LTX Video 2.0 Pro
Strengths: Premium product stories
Compare engines
Compare available LTX Video 2.0 Pro with current Wan 2.6 Text & Image to Video. LTX favors ten-second high-resolution 16:9 work through 4K, while Wan broadens aspect ratios and reaches 15 seconds in text/image modes, with a separate silent reference-video route.
Quick verdict
Stay on available LTX Video 2.0 Pro for high-resolution landscape delivery; switch to current Wan 2.6 Text & Image to Video for broader ratios, text/image clips up to 15 seconds with optional audio, or separate silent five/ten-second reference-video work.
Strengths: Premium product stories
Strengths: General purpose video
MaxVideoAI price per second by resolution; the pricing score compares the same tier when possible.
LTX Video 2.0 Pro
Wan 2.6 Text & Image to Video
Comparable score tier: 1080p: $0.08/s vs 720p: $0.13/s
Scores reflect quality and control on MaxVideoAI across 11 criteria.
How we benchmarkPrompt Adherence
iprompt alignment / instruction followingVisual Quality
iimage quality / aesthetic quality / realism / artifacts / flickerMotion Realism
imotion smoothness / physics plausibilityTemporal Consistency
itemporal coherence / identity consistencyHuman Fidelity
ifaces / hands / body realismText & UI Legibility
itext rendering / readabilityAudio & Lip Sync
ilip sync quality / dialogue syncMulti-Shot Sequencing
ishot-to-shot continuity / multi-shotControllability
icamera control / constraint followingSpeed & Stability
ilatency / success ratePricing
iprice per second / credits / estimated costLTX Video 2.0 Pro leads on 7/11 (best: Audio & Lip Sync, Human Fidelity).
Cheaper: LTX Video 2.0 Pro (1080p: $0.08/s vs 720p: $0.13/s).
Max resolution: LTX Video 2.0 Pro (4K vs Up to 1080p).
Compare key AI video model specs side-by-side (pricing, inputs, resolution, duration, aspect ratios, audio, and core controls). This is a high-level snapshot — see the full engine profile for the complete feature set and prompt examples.
Stay with LTX for high resolution
Keep LTX Video 2.0 Pro for 16:9 text/image production in 1080p, 1440p, or 4K with audio and a ten-second maximum.
Use Wan text mode for five ratios
Wan 2.6 text-to-video offers 16:9, 9:16, 1:1, 4:3, and 3:4. Image-to-video instead follows the source image aspect ratio; both modes support 5 to 15 seconds and optional audio.
Separate reference-video limits
Wan 2.6 reference-video is separate: it accepts 16:9, 9:16, 1:1, 4:3, or 3:4, produces 5- or 10-second output, and does not generate audio.
Choose by delivery requirement
LTX fits high-resolution landscape masters; Wan fits longer general-purpose shots or reference-led continuity when 1080p is sufficient.
Side-by-side renders from the same prompt on MaxVideoAI. Prompts are identical; outputs may vary by model.
Showing up to 3 prompt pairs for clarity.
What it tests: Motion Realism + Temporal Consistency + Visual Quality
Wide 16:9 cinematic action shot, a runner sprints through a rainy city street at night, water splashes realistically with each step, reflections on wet asphalt, handheld tracking camera following from the side. Dynamic motion with believable inertia and physics, no rubbery limbs, no wobbling background, stable scene geometry, minimal temporal flicker, sharp details despite fast movement, realistic motion blur.
LTX Video 2.0 Pro
Wan 2.6 Text & Image to Video
What it tests: Human Fidelity + Audio/Lip Sync + Prompt Adherence
Vertical 9:16 TikTok-style UGC selfie video, handheld smartphone feel, natural indoor daylight near a window. A friendly creator speaks directly to camera with natural blinking, subtle head nods, and a warm smile. Add small human imperfections: a tiny hesitation, a soft breath, a quick smile mid-sentence, and a micro-pause before the last line. Realistic skin texture, stable identity, no face warping, minimal flicker, clean audio with natural room tone. No subtitles. No on-screen text. No logos. No watermarks. The creator says (exactly, with the same pacing and hesitations): “Okay, so… um… quick thing. If you’re feeling stuck, just do the tiniest first step… like, set a two-minute timer and start. (smiles) That’s it. You’ll be surprised how fast it gets easier.”
LTX Video 2.0 Pro
Wan 2.6 Text & Image to Video
What it tests: Hands/Fingers + Text & UI Legibility + Prompt Adherence
Wide 16:9 full-body unboxing video in a clean studio/kitchen setting. A person is fully visible (head-to-toe or at least head-to-knees) standing behind a minimalist tabletop. They unbox a small generic gadget from a plain matte cardboard box: peel the seal, open the lid, remove the inner tray, take out the device and accessories, and lay everything neatly on the table. The person occasionally lifts the item toward the camera for a closer look, then places it back down. Realism requirements: natural body proportions, stable identity, realistic skin and clothing fabric, no face warping, no unnatural limb bending. Hands must be highly realistic: correct finger count, natural grip, believable pressure/contact with the box and device, consistent shadows, no extra fingers, no “floating” objects. Keep object geometry stable, no wobbling background, minimal temporal flicker. Camera: single continuous shot, tripod-stable, slight cinematic push-in (very slow), eye-level or slightly above table height. Natural soft daylight, clean shadows, realistic materials and textures. No logos, no brand names, no watermarks. No subtitles. Optional on-screen title at the top (perfectly readable and stable, no jitter): "UNBOXING — FIRST LOOK"
LTX Video 2.0 Pro
Wan 2.6 Text & Image to Video
This side-by-side AI video comparison uses identical prompts to highlight differences in motion, realism, human fidelity, and text legibility. For full specs, controls, and more prompt examples, open each engine profile.
Answers for high-resolution LTX delivery and Wan text, image, or reference workflows.
Yes. The available LTX route supports 1080p, 1440p, and 4K landscape output, while Wan 2.6 tops out at 1080p.
Wan 2.6 text-to-video supports 5 to 15 seconds and five ratios. Image-to-video supports the same durations, but follows the source image aspect ratio.
No. That separate mode creates silent five- or ten-second clips from one to three reference videos; the 15-second ceiling applies only to text/image modes.