With the deep evolution of AI technology, the barriers to video production are being completely reshaped. The video production framework Remotion officially launched its powerful feature — Remotion Skills — in January 2026. This feature marks the beginning of a new era in video creation, transitioning from traditional "code-driven" to "AI instruction-driven."

In simple terms, Remotion Skills is a toolset optimized for large language models (LLMs). According to AIbase, developers can now command AI agents (such as Claude Code) to directly write, modify, and generate professional video animations based on React, using simple natural language instructions. This means users no longer need to type complex TypeScript code line by line; they just need to tell the AI, "Create a tutorial video with 3D rotation effects," and the system will automatically complete the code building and video rendering.
Aside from significantly lowering the creative barrier, this technology also shows impressive integration efficiency. According to AIbase, Remotion Skills works closely with the MCP (Model Context Protocol) toolchain, supporting developers to quickly grant AI video production capabilities through the npx skills add command. This "plug-and-play" intelligent model is attracting a large number of developers, and even in the early stage, it has gained high attention and installation volumes on relevant platforms, indicating that a fully automated AI video production line is just around the corner.
Documentation: https://www.remotion.dev/docs/ai/
Key Points:
🗣️ Natural Language Driven: Users can directly command AI to generate complex React video animations using natural language, without manually writing complicated code.
🛠️ Intelligent Agent Skill Enhancement: Through the Remotion Skills toolset, AI agents can deeply call the Remotion library to achieve precise pixel-level video control.
🚀 Efficient Integration Collaboration: Supports seamless integration with Claude Code and MCP Protocol, greatly simplifying the production process and development costs of programmatic videos.