When Google unveiled Veo 3, its latest generative video model, anticipation among video creators soared. The tool—now able to generate not only visuals but also sounds and dialogue—enabled a wave of self-styled film trailers, commercials, and creative shorts. Acclaimed director Darren Aronofsky debuted ´Ancestra,´ a film produced with Veo 3, a testament to its creative capabilities. Google DeepMind chief Demis Hassabis compared this leap in realism to film’s transition out of the silent era.
However, Veo 3’s launch was quickly overshadowed by a persistent technical flaw: the platform often overlays nonsensical or garbled subtitles on generated videos, regardless of whether users request captions. Creators found the only remedies—regenerating expensive clips or scrubbing subtitles with external tools—frustrating and costly. Despite Google’s public assurances of a fix in early June, reports from the product’s Discord community suggest that the problem remains unresolved. With each generation costing users valuable credits, the stakes are high for those aiming to produce professional content, but plagued by outputs rendered unusable by intrusive text.
Experts believe Veo 3’s relentless subtitle insertion likely stems from its training data, which almost certainly includes YouTube and TikTok videos—many of which already feature embedded captions. Because these captions are part of the video frames rather than layered as metadata, filtering them out before training would require a laborious overhaul. Negative prompts like ´no subtitles´ are known to be less effective in generative Artificial Intelligence systems. Google acknowledges continued efforts to refine Veo 3, urging user feedback, but the process may require retraining the entire model with cleaner data—a significant undertaking. For some artists and filmmakers, Veo 3’s subtitle glitch illustrates the penalties of tech companies prioritizing rapid product launches over reliable user experience. For now, Google’s race to dominate artificial video generation is marred by frustrating, unrequested subtitles.