LibTV 720° Panorama Feature
LibTV recently added 720° panoramic video generation — describe a scene in one sentence and AI produces a draggable spherical shot, sharply reducing the setup and iteration cost of immersive spatial storytelling.
LibTV recently added 720° panoramic video generation — describe a scene in one sentence and AI produces a draggable spherical shot, sharply reducing the setup and iteration cost of immersive spatial storytelling.
LibTV recently shipped a new feature — 720° panoramic video generation. While putting this demo together, my first reaction wasn't "another output format" — it was "panoramic content can finally start without a live shoot."
Making panoramic content used to come down to two paths: a full live-shoot pipeline — gear, location, post — or manually building and rendering scenes in 3D software. Neither is cheap on time. LibTV takes a different entry point: describe the scene, and AI generates a 720° spherical view. Indoor spaces, outdoor landscapes, concept visuals — one prompt can produce a panoramic shot you can drag and rotate. For creators who need to explore directions and test mood quickly, that entry is far lighter than "build the scene first, then render."
I tried several prompts, from minimal interiors to cyberpunk nightscapes, and generation was faster than I expected. On a phone, a swipe and a drag shift the viewpoint — that feeling of being placed inside the scene is genuinely absorbing. You're not looking at a flat image; you're turning your head inside the space. That interactivity is what makes the panoramic format valuable, and with LibTV shortening the generation pipeline, the cost of iteration drops with it.
For creators working in brand visuals and spatial narrative, 720° panorama isn't just a show-off format. It naturally carries environment mood, spatial emotion, and scene storytelling. Where we might have spent half a day building a scene before we could start telling a story, now we can explore several directions in roughly ten minutes and pick the one with the strongest narrative potential to develop further. That efficiency jump is worth keeping in the creative toolkit.