AI tool comparison
Adobe Firefly Video 2.0 vs Lyria 3 Pro
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
Design & Creative
Adobe Firefly Video 2.0
Scene continuation and inpainting for AI video, baked into Premiere Pro
100%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
Adobe Firefly Video 2.0 adds scene continuation — seamlessly extending generated video clips — and frame-level inpainting that lets editors remove or replace objects in motion. Both features are live inside Premiere Pro and the standalone Firefly web app. It's Adobe's clearest move yet toward making generative video a native part of the professional editing workflow rather than a bolt-on.
Creative
Lyria 3 Pro
Google's upgraded music AI generates full 3-minute songs from text
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Paid
Entry
Google has upgraded Lyria 3 to Lyria 3 Pro — a significant step up in its music generation model that's now available across Vertex AI, Google AI Studio, the Gemini API, Google Vids, and the Gemini app. The key jump: the new model generates tracks up to three full minutes (vs. the previous 30-second cap), with structured song sections including intros, verses, choruses, and bridges that actually transition musically. The model adds multilingual vocals (sing in any of 140+ supported languages), JSON-structured prompting for reliable format control, and maintains Google's SynthID watermarking on all output for provenance tracking. Audio quality has been noticeably improved, with better instrument separation and more natural dynamics across the full track length. For developers, Lyria 3 Pro is available via the standard Gemini API — the same authentication and SDK you'd use for text generation, which dramatically lowers the barrier to integrating music into apps. Google Vids gets native integration, making AI-scored video content a one-click operation.
Reviewer scorecard
“Scene continuation is the first generative video feature that doesn't feel like a party trick — you can actually extend a shot that ends half a second too early without the cut being obvious, which is a real problem editors hit constantly. The inpainting on moving objects is genuinely impressive when the motion is simple (static background, clear subject boundary), but it degrades fast on complex motion blur or crowded frames, and Adobe isn't hiding that. The output doesn't have a consistent 'Firefly fingerprint' the way early image Firefly did — skin tones and motion grain are calibrated enough that you'd have to know what to look for, which is the right outcome for a professional tool.”
“Three minutes of structured music that transitions properly is the minimum bar for real creative use. Lyria 3 Pro finally clears it. I'd use this for short film scoring and social video — it's not replacing a composer, but it's replacing stock music licensing.”
“Direct competitors are Runway Gen-3, Kling, and Sora's API — all of which have scene continuation in some form — but none of them are embedded in Premiere Pro's timeline where the actual professional editing work happens. That distribution advantage is real and not easily replicated. The scenario where this breaks is complex multi-object inpainting on handheld footage with motion blur, which Adobe's own demos quietly avoid. What kills this in 12 months isn't a competitor — it's Adobe's own generative credit pricing surviving contact with heavy professional users who will burn through monthly allotments on a single long-form project. If credits don't scale gracefully with CC plans, the power users who would drive adoption will route around it.”
“Three minutes is still too short for most real-world music use cases, and 'structured sections' often still sound jarring compared to human-arranged music. Suno and Udio are ahead on pure output quality; Lyria's advantage is ecosystem integration, not sound.”
“The buyer is every Creative Cloud subscriber who already pays $54.99/month — Adobe doesn't need to acquire anyone new, it needs to justify the renewal. Scene continuation and inpainting are exactly the kind of features that turn a 'do I still need this subscription' moment into a 'I can't work without this' moment, which is the only metric that matters for a $19B ARR subscription business. The moat here isn't the model — Runway and Kling have comparable or better raw generation quality — it's the workflow integration: your footage, your timeline, your color grades, no round-trip export. The risk is that generative credit costs become a hidden overage bill that erodes the all-in-one value prop, which Adobe has failed to price cleanly before with Firefly credits.”
“The job-to-be-done is precise: 'fix timing and object problems in footage without leaving my editing timeline,' and for that one job, this is now the most complete solution available to a Premiere Pro user. Onboarding is effectively zero for existing Premiere users — the features surface contextually in the timeline, which is the right call. The incompleteness problem is that inpainting still requires manual masking on complex moving subjects, meaning you need to keep After Effects open for anything beyond simple object removal, so it's not yet a full workflow replacement. The product has a clear opinion — generative tools should live where editors work, not in a separate app — and that opinion is correct.”
“Same API key as Gemini, three-minute output, JSON prompting for structure — this is finally production-ready for apps that need dynamic background music or scored video. The integration with Google Vids is a smart forcing function.”
“The integration path is the story here: music generation directly inside the same developer stack as text and video means personalized, dynamic audio becomes a default feature of AI apps, not a special case. That's a massive shift for UX design.”
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