Finally Tried HappyHorse! Anyone Can Generate AI Videos—HK Films & K-Dramas in One Click
Lately, a new name has been quietly heating up the AI video space—HappyHorse (also nicknamed “Happy Pony”). In AIGC communities it’s been everywhere, but invite codes have been hard to get. Then, over the past couple of days, I found it’s actually running gray testing inside the Qwen app—and I was lucky enough to get access. After trying it, I was genuinely surprised.

What Is HappyHorse? Why Is Everyone Talking About It?
HappyHorse is an AI video generation tool, but unlike many past AI video products, it doesn’t feel like something “only for experts.” Its biggest strength is lowering the barrier for everyday creators. You don’t need to master camera language, blocking, sound design, or long complex prompts—you can still produce high-quality, stylistically diverse short videos.
I tried three completely different styles, and all of them impressed me:
🕵️ Interrogating a Kitten · TVB Crime-Drama Vibe
My prompt was simple: “Interrogate a kitten—lights on, slap the table.” The result instantly felt like 1990s TVB Detective Investigation Files—expressions, cuts, and pacing were smooth, with almost none of the usual AI stiffness.
🎬 Hong Kong Gangster Film Style
This round tested a more complex scene: facial performance, camera movement, and dialogue rhythm were all handled well. Friends from Guangdong who know Hong Kong cinema said it felt “right,” and the naturalness of Cantonese dialogue was praised too.
☀️ K-Drama Romantic Style
I tried a setup with sunlight, a pause, and “three seconds of quiet air”—and the output really had that Full House atmosphere. HappyHorse’s grasp of Korean emotional pacing was more nuanced than I expected.
Not Just Chinese: Multilingual, Multicultural Styles
What surprised me more is that HappyHorse isn’t Chinese-only. I tested Korean, English, and French dialogue—and all sounded natural. That means you can make localized short videos or mimic film styles from different regions. For creators and marketing teams targeting overseas audiences, that’s very practical.
Why HappyHorse Breaks the “Expert-Only” Barrier in AI Video
Many earlier AI video tools (like early Sora-style products) were powerful on paper, but hard for regular users to use well. Camera language, parameters, blocking—too steep for most people.
HappyHorse took a different path: templates + community play + one-click remix. When you see a style you like, you can reuse its prompt or template directly. So AI video stops being a toy for a few people and becomes:
- New meme material
- New short-drama footage
- New Moments/feed content
- Even new short-video marketing assets
Compared to Sora: Great Tech Without Real Scenarios Goes Nowhere
Interestingly, OpenAI’s Sora recently announced it would stop development—largely due to high cost and lack of real-world use cases. HappyHorse, from the start, aimed at everyday usability: Hong Kong films, K-dramas, retro movies, pet skits—content people actually understand, enjoy, and share.
What’s Next: Entry Points, Templates, Community, and Price
The AI video race is entering a new phase:
- Distribution: Whoever gets integrated into mainstream apps (like Qwen) wins massive reach.
- Templates: More fun, reusable style templates attract casual users.
- Community: Where people share, remix, and create second-hand content builds stickiness.
- Pricing: As tech matures, cost of use becomes decisive.
Everyday People as Directors—Closer Than We Think
When a few sentences can produce a convincing Hong Kong film clip or a warm K-drama-style short, it really feels like the day ordinary people become directors may come sooner than we think.