Figma Weave: Runway Aleph 2.0 Brings Frame-Level Video Direction
Figma has integrated Runway's Aleph 2.0 model into Figma Weave, the company's AI-native creative workflow canvas, enabling frame-level creative direction for video editing. The model supports 30-second clips, accepts reference images to define a visual style, and applies keyframe edits intelligently, following subjects across every frame they appear in. Rather than single-prompt video generation, Aleph 2.0 allows creators to build sequences one directorial decision at a time, including changing camera angles, introducing new characters, or transforming environments without reshooting. Figma has indicated pricing will update to scale with input length.
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Runway Aleph 2.0 Arrives in Figma Weave
Figma has brought Runway's Aleph 2.0 model to Figma Weave, the company's AI-native creative workflow canvas. Available as of June 18, 2026. Figma acquired Israeli AI startup Weavy in October 2025 for over $200 million and rebranded the platform as Figma Weave.
What Aleph 2.0 Brings
Frame-Level Creative Direction
Aleph 2.0 allows creators to direct individual frames, with edits propagating intelligently throughout the rest of the clip. A change applied to a subject in one frame follows that subject across every frame it appears in.
Longer Clips with Reference-Driven Styling
The model supports clips up to 30 seconds. Creators can supply reference images to establish the aesthetic, and Aleph 2.0 applies that visual identity consistently while leaving unchanged elements intact.
Creative Freedom Beyond Captured Footage
Within Weave's node-based canvas, creators can change camera angles, introduce new characters, or transform environments entirely, without reshooting.
Iterative, Node-Based Workflow
The Aleph 2.0 node integrates into Weave's connected workflow structure. Creators preview changes before committing and can chain Aleph 2.0 with other model nodes.
Pricing and Availability
Available now. Figma has noted pricing will be updated to scale with input length, which may reduce costs for shorter clips.