Flux 2 vs Reve
Neon cityscapes, futuristic tech, and dystopian aesthetic — see how these models compare with real AI-generated outputs.
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Cyberpunk and sci-fi visuals live or die by atmosphere: neon-soaked city canyons, reflective rain streets, holographic signage, and dense mechanical detail. On Influencer Studio, Flux 2 and Reve both excel at futuristic aesthetics—but they approach the genre from different strengths.
Flux 2 leans into control and production flexibility (editing, style transfer, LoRA support, and higher resolution output), while Reve focuses on polished aesthetics and notably reliable text rendering—useful for diegetic signage, UI overlays, and poster-like compositions.
Cyberpunk & Sci-Fi — Side-by-Side Results
Prompt
"A 20s woman with shoulder-length black hair and subtle neon eyeliner wears an oversized hoodie, bike shorts, and chunky sneakers, holding her phone at arm’s length for a slightly angled selfie while glancing near the camera with a relaxed half-smile. She’s standing under a flickering ramen-shop awning on a rain-slick neon street, pink-blue-purple signage reflecting off puddles, with holographic ads and passing commuters blurred behind her like a real TikTok street check-in. Shot on a phone camera with natural ambient neon lighting, a little motion blur and light grain for an authentic, unpolished UGC vibe."
Feature Comparison
| Feature | Flux 2 | Reve |
|---|---|---|
| Provider | Black Forest Labs | Reve |
| Subcategories | text-to-image, image-to-image | text-to-image |
| 1080p / 2k Mode | Yes | Yes |
| 4k Mode | Yes | No |
| NSFW Rating | Low | Medium |
| Aspect Ratio | 1:1, 16:9, 9:16, 3:4, 4:3 | 1:1, 16:9, 9:16, 3:4, 4:3 |
| Model Variant | Standard, Klein 9B | — |
| Starting Price | 22 credits | 8 credits |
Flux 2 Strengths
- High-detail 4MP output for neon cityscapes, intricate armor, and dense techno-grime textures
- Versatile image-to-image editing to iterate on lighting, rain reflections, fog, and composition without restarting
- LoRA support for consistent cyberpunk sub-styles (e.g., retro-future, hard sci-fi, dystopian noir) across a series
- Style transfer for quickly mapping a cohesive “neon-noir” palette across multiple scenes
- Face-swap support for character continuity in futuristic portraits and street-level narratives
Reve Strengths
- Strong aesthetic quality for cinematic cyberpunk lighting, color harmony, and striking poster-style frames
- Accurate text rendering for readable neon signage, interface labels, product names, and in-world typography
- Fast, creative text-to-image ideation for concept art: drones, megacorp billboards, androids, and skyline shots
- Lower cost per image for high-volume exploration of prompts and variations
Verdict
If you need maximum control for cyberpunk world-building—consistent characters, repeatable styles, and iterative edits—Flux 2 is the better “production” choice, especially when you want higher resolution outputs and the option to fine-tune a signature dystopian look.
If your priority is stylish results with dependable typography (think readable holographic ads, street signs, UI panels) at a lower cost per image, Reve is a strong pick for sci-fi creatives producing posters, thumbnails, and brand-forward neon concepts.
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