Google OMNI – How to Access + Tutorial + Seedance 2.0 Comparison
In this video we will be seeing how to access and use the all new Google Omni, a video editor and generator, which is being dubbed as the Nano Banana of videos. We will first of all see how to access Omni, then we will see how to use it inside Google Gemini and Google Flow. Then we will see 4 different examples where we will compare it to Seedance 2.0. Here’s the video:
Video Summary
Here is a brief summary of the video analyzing the Google Omni video editing model:
- Core Functionality: Google Omni is primarily an AI video editor, not a video generator from scratch [00:13]. It outperforms competing tools like Seedance 2.0 in basic physics rendering for simple edits (e.g., making a cup levitate) [00:32, 05:57].
- Access Requirements: Accessing Omni requires a paid subscription to either the Google AI Plus or Pro plan [00:55]. The Pro plan is highly recommended over the Plus plan for heavy use [03:47].
- Platforms:
- Google Flow: The official filmmaking app interface. It allows granular settings like aspect ratios but costs 40 credits per video edit [01:45, 02:16].
- Google Gemini: Features a standard “create video” button with no credit consumption, but it lacks aspect ratio controls and enforces 2 to 3-hour wait times between generations for Plus users [01:13, 02:55, 03:14].
- Key Limitations: Omni struggles significantly with complex, human-centric video edits, often causing heavy morphing or rewriting the video entirely from scratch [08:40, 09:19].
- Comparison Verdict: Seedance 2.0 remains the vastly superior model for advanced editing and human scenes [09:53]. The creator notes that a more fair comparison for Google Omni would be Runway’s newly released Gen-3 Alpha 2.0 [11:22].

