Migrate from gemini to pika.
1 documentation-derived translation pattern — what carries over and what to watch for. Cited to the Feature Parity Map; the audit tells you whether the move is worth it.
Consolidate Pika 2.5 text-to-video and image-to-video into Gemini's native video generation (Gemini Omni, the model now replacing Veo in the Gemini app) for teams already standardizing on Google. Re-create Pika prompts by attaching the video-generation tool in the Gemini prompt bar; Gemini clips include native audio and run up to about 10 seconds per generation. Video generation requires a paid Google AI plan (Plus, Pro, or Ultra) and is metered by a refreshing daily usage allowance that Google sets per tier and adjusts over time (it does not publish fixed per-day counts), rather than by Pika's monthly credit pool; route higher-volume editorial work through Google Flow's credit pool. This folds Pika's standalone video subscription into an existing Gemini/Workspace seat.
- Warning: Gemini meters app video by a small refreshing daily allowance (set per tier and changed over time by Google, not a published fixed count) rather than a monthly credit pool, so a Pika paid plan's large monthly credit balance (hundreds to thousands of credits) can translate to far more clips in a burst than Gemini's daily limit allows -- pushing heavier or bursty workloads onto AI Ultra or Google Flow.
- Warning: All Gemini video outputs carry a SynthID watermark, whereas Pika's paid plans deliver watermark-free downloads -- so switching changes the provenance/watermark profile of finished clips.
- Warning: Pika's preset creative tools (Pikaffects, Pikascenes, Pikaframes) are bespoke; Gemini has no one-to-one equivalent, so those specific transformation and keyframe workflows must be re-prompted or rebuilt in Flow.