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Seedance 2.0 Example: Basic Prompt Guide 

Seedance 2.0 Prompt Guide From Zero to Cinematic AI Videos (5 Copy-Paste Prompts)

Seedance 2.0 is quickly becoming one of the most powerful AI video models for creators who want true cinematic results. With strong frame-to-frame consistency, realistic physics, native audio generation, and advanced camera control, Seedance 2.0 allows you to create film-quality AI videos using well-structured prompts and reference materials.

In this guide, you’ll learn how to write high-performing Seedance 2.0 prompts, follow a proven workflow, and use 5 real, copy-paste prompt examples to create viral-style AI videos.

If you want to know more comprehensive and advanced usage methods of Seedance, you can refer to Seedance 2.0 Ultimate Prompt Guide.

GlobalGPT has officially integrated Seedance 2.0, removing all phone verification and regional restrictions. For $10.8/month on the Pro Plan, you get instant access to execute Seedance 2.0 prompts without waitlists. You can switch between Seedance 2.0 and other cinematic models like Veo 3.1 or Kling in a single workspace.

Why Seedance 2.0 Is a Game-Changer for AI Video Prompts

Seedance 2.0 stands out because it understands prompts at a “director level,” not just simple text-to-video. In a Seedance 2.0 review, the model’s ability to handle complex instructions is frequently cited as its strongest asset.

There are 9 key features that creators call a category killer:

  • Near-perfect character, clothing, and lighting consistency across frames
  • Powerful reference system:
    • One image to lock visual style
    • One video to lock camera movement and action
    • One audio track to lock rhythm and pacing
  • Automatic multi-shot storytelling from a single description
  • Native audio + video generation with synced dialogue and sound effects (note: consider privacy risks)
  • Strong physical realism for cloth, fluids, gravity, and combat

This means your Seedance 2.0 prompt is no longer just text. It becomes a full production instruction.

What Makes a High-Quality Seedance 2.0 Prompt?

The best Seedance 2.0 prompts follow a director-style structure:

Subject + Action + Camera + Scene + Style + Constraints

The more specific you are, the more cinematic and consistent the result.

Use @Image1 as the main subject reference.
Create a video where [subject] [action] in [scene].
The camera [camera movement].
The visual style is [style, lighting, mood].
Keep [face/product/logo/clothing] consistent throughout the video.
Avoid distortion, flickering, extra objects, unreadable text, or identity drift.

A good Seedance prompt should read like a director’s note, not like a keyword list.

Weak prompt:

Make a cool video of a man walking back home tiredly, cinematic.

Better prompt:

Prompt: A man @ image 1 walks tiredly down the corridor after work, slows his pace, and finally stops at the front door. Close-up of his face, he takes a deep breath, adjusts his emotions, puts away his negative feelings, and becomes relaxed. Then a close-up shows him rummaging through to find the keys, inserting them into the lock, and entering his home. His little daughter and a pet dog run happily to greet and hug him. The interior is very warm and cozy, with natural dialogue throughout.
Case A: Absolute Character Consistency Using the image reference mode, you can lock a character’s identity.

How to Write Seedance Prompts for Different Input Types

Different Seedance workflows require different prompt styles.

Prompt TypeWhat You InputBest Use CasesWhen to Use It
T2V (Text-to-Video)Text onlyComplex physical movements, sports, fixing gravity glitches.When you need realistic action from scratch without any image assets.
I2V (Image-to-Video)1 Image + TextMicro-expressions, product commercials, cinematic ASMR videos (focusing on texture & touch).When you want a specific picture to come alive and interact with objects.
R2V (Reference-to-Video)Multiple Files (@-tags) + TextMultiverse transitions, storyboards, exact style/character copying.When you need strict consistency or complex multimodal logic across scenes.
A2V (Audio-to-Video)Audio + Image/Video + TextLip-syncing, rhythmic transitions, high-impact sound design, or music videos.When the movement must be perfectly synced to the rhythm or timing of a sound file.

Text-to-Video Prompt

Use text-to-video when you do not need a specific character, product, or reference motion.

Best for:

  • abstract concepts
  • mood videos
  • background scenes
  • generic cinematic shots
  • first-round ideation

Template:

Create a video of [subject] [action] in [scene]. 
Camera: [shot type and movement]. 
Style: [lighting, color, mood, genre]. 
Details: [materials, atmosphere, background elements]. 
Quality rules: sharp focus, realistic motion, no distortion, no unreadable text.

Example1:

Competitive pair figure skating scene. Opening with a low-angle tracking shot following the ice blades, clear ice shavings and reflection details. Entering the spin segment, the male skater's axis slightly shifts causing a mistake, the spin rhythm briefly collapses. The female skater quickly adjusts her center of gravity, with a calm expression signaling 'Stay with me', actively guiding the male skater to realign the rhythm. Then seamlessly transitions into a lift, clean and stable lines. The climax is a synchronized jump combination, straight aerial posture, decisive landing, audio and visual perfectly aligned. The female skater wears a dark blue figure skating dress, the male skater is in competitive sportswear

Example2:

You do not need to add sound later. This AI creates native dual-channel audio that perfectly matches the video. It can even make high-quality ASMR sounds.

Immersive first-person perspective hand ASMR video. Close-up shot, under warm soft light, a pair of slender hands gently triggers different objects in sequence: the light scraping of frosted glass, the rubbing of plush fabric, the light tapping of an acrylic board, the light squeezing of bubble wrap, the light scratching of a wooden comb. Fingers move slowly and gently, no background music, pure natural trigger sounds, relaxed and healing visual atmosphere."

Example3:

Martial arts-style audio-visual blockbuster, the swordsman in white and the swordsman in the bamboo forest confront each other. The camera slowly moved between the two people, and the focus switched between raindrops and the sword handle. The atmosphere was extremely depressed, and only the sound of rain could be heard. Suddenly, a thunderbolt flashed, and the two charged at the same time. The side shot camera moved at high speed, capturing the footsteps of mud splashing. The moment the two soldiers meet, the picture switches to extremely slow motion, clearly showing the ring shock waves formed by the sword shaking rain, and the bamboo leaves cut off by the sword gas. Then, when they returned to normal speed, the two people landed back to back, and the bucket hat of the swordsman cracked, and the picture stopped abruptly.

Image-to-Video Prompt

Use image-to-video when identity or product accuracy matters.

Best for:

  • character animation
  • product ads
  • logo reveals
  • fashion motion
  • two-photo short films

Template:

Use @Image1 as the exact visual reference for [subject/product/logo]. 
Animate it by [action].
The scene is [environment].
Camera: [movement].
Style: [visual direction].
Keep [key visual details] consistent throughout.

Example1:

Use @Image1 as the exact visual reference for the main character. She feels guilty, looks left and right, reaches out of the frame, grabs a cola and takes a sip, showing a satisfied expression. Hearing footsteps, the character quickly puts the cola back. At this moment, a cowboy walks in and takes the cola. The ending zooms into a top-lit close-up of the cola against a pure black background, with artistic subtitles and voiceover: 'Yikou Cola, you must taste it!'

Example2:

Charleston dance in the style of 1920s jazz clubs. A female dancer in a golden fringe dress and a male dancer in a striped suit perform high-intensity moves. The actions include rapid syncopated steps, aerial tosses and catches, and large sweeping arm movements. The camera uses dynamic tracking shots, interspersed with close-ups of foot movements. The focus is on the physical details of the fringe flaring wildly with every kick, the gleam of sweat on the skin, and the retro film grain texture with smoke effects. The background jazz band and cheering audience create an intense party atmosphere.

Example 3:

A girl in a hat in the middle sings softly, "I'm so proud of my family!" and then turns to embrace the black girl in the center. The black girl responds emotionally, "My sweetie, you're the heart of our family," and returns the embrace. The boy in yellow clothes on the left says happily, "Folks, let's dance together to celebrate!" The girl on the far right replies immediately, "I'll bring the music!" as the background Latin music starts playing. The woman in an orange dress on the left (Julietta) smiles and nods, while the woman on the right with braids (Luiza) clenches her fists and waves her arms. Some people in the crowd begin to step their feet, the children clap in rhythm, and the whole family is about to form a circle, dancing joyfully to the upbeat music, their skirts fluttering, expressing happiness and warmth on the colorful streets.
Case C: Audio-to-Visual Rhythm Sync Control the pulse of your video using external audio waveforms.

Video-to-Video Prompt

Use video-to-video when movement matters more than description.

Best for:

  • viral video replication
  • dance motion transfer
  • camera motion transfer
  • action reference
  • fashion walking sequences

Template:

Use @Video1 as the motion and camera reference. 
Use @Image1 as the new subject reference.
Keep the camera movement, pacing, and main action from @Video1, but replace the original subject with @Image1.
Generate a new scene in [environment/style].
Do not copy the original background, face, or branding from @Video1.

Audio-to-Video Prompt

Use audio-to-video when timing, rhythm, or sound-on performance matters.

Best for:

  • music videos
  • dancing
  • ad pacing
  • dialogue
  • voiceover
  • emotional scenes

Template:

Use @Audio1 as the rhythm and mood reference. 
Create a video where [subject] [action] in sync with the beat / voice / sound.
Camera cuts and movement should follow the pacing of @Audio1.
Style: [visual style].
Keep the subject consistent and make all motion natural.

Example:

Use @Audio1 as the rhythm reference. 
Create a fast 9:16 sneaker ad where the sneaker from @Image1 lands on a reflective floor exactly on the first beat. 
Each beat triggers a new shot: sole close-up, side profile, lace detail, final hero pose. 
High-energy sports commercial, dark background, sharp rim light, clean reflections. 
Keep the sneaker shape, color, logo, and material unchanged.

5 Copy-Paste Prompts

Prompt 1: Anime Girl Healing Entrance

Seedance 2.0 Prompt:

An 18-year-old Japanese anime girl with short hair, wearing a white dress and straw hat, standing on a forest path in warm summer afternoon sunlight. She slowly turns toward the camera and smiles gently. A light breeze moves her hair and dress. The camera slowly pushes in from medium shot to close-up. Soft natural lighting, film grain, healing and peaceful mood, cinematic quality. Maintain face and clothing consistency, no distortion, high detail.

Reference: Upload one clear front-facing anime character image.

Prompt 2: Product 360° Rotation (Ecommerce)

Seedance 2.0 Prompt:

A minimalist black matte mechanical keyboard on a pure white infinite studio background, rotating smoothly 360 degrees clockwise. RGB lighting gently breathing. Keycap text sharp and readable. Fixed macro camera, smooth turntable motion, commercial product photography style, soft high-key lighting, no noise. Logo and text remain perfectly consistent.

Reference: Upload a high-resolution product image.

Prompt 3: Action Fight Scene (Video Reference)

Seedance 2.0 Prompt:

A wuxia-style male hero (based on reference video character), wearing black martial outfit, fighting enemies in a rainy bamboo forest at night. Fast sword combos with visible sword light trails and splashing water. Fast follow camera, crane shots, and quick close-ups. Cinematic camera language. Maintain character appearance and clothing consistency. Realistic physics, wet fabric, rain interaction.

Reference: Upload a martial arts video + character image.

Prompt 4: Music Video Beat Sync (Audio Driven)

Seedance 2.0 Prompt:

A trendy cyberpunk girl dancing in a neon city street at night. Every strong beat triggers a cut or speed-ramped camera move. Neon signs reflecting on wet ground. Cyberpunk style, fast-paced editing, multi-shot continuity. Dance movements and character appearance remain consistent.

Reference: Upload BGM audio + dance reference video or image.

Prompt 5: Multi-Shot Storytelling

Seedance 2.0 Prompt:

A lonely robot wakes up in an abandoned factory (Scene 1). It walks outside and sees a sunset wasteland (Scene 2). It discovers a small flower and gently touches it (Scene 3). Finally, it looks up and smiles at the sky (Scene 4). Keep robot appearance consistent. Emotional transition from confusion to warmth. Cinematic camera, warm tones, epic mood, no flicker.

Reference: Upload robot design + sunset wasteland image.

Mastering the Art of the Prompt: 7 Rules for Seedance 2.0 Success

Even with the most powerful AI, the quality of your output is determined by the clarity of your input. To help you bypass “AI hallucinations” and common artifacts, we have compiled the ultimate Seedance 2.0 Prompting Blueprint.

Follow these seven professional standards to turn your vision into a pixel-perfect commercial.

1. Assign “Roles” to Your @Mentions

Never mention your files casually. Start your prompt by defining exactly what each input controls. This anchors the AI’s logic.

  • Example: “Use @Image1 for identity, @Video1 for motion, and @Audio1 for rhythm.”

2. The “One Action” Rule

AI video models struggle with complex choreography. To prevent “melting” or chaotic motion, limit each clip to one primary action.

  • Good: “The character turns around and smiles.”
  • Bad: “The character runs, jumps, opens a door, and then flies away.”

3. Speak the Language of Cinema

Seedance 2.0 responds best to professional camera direction. Instead of saying “zoom,” use specific filmmaker terminology:

Camera Term Meaning How to Prompt
Wide shotShows full scene and environment“A cinematic wide shot of the entire landscape.”
Medium shotSubject from waist/chest up“A medium shot showing the character from the waist up.”
Close-upFace or object detail“A sharp close-up focusing on the product texture.”
Dolly-inCamera moves closer to subject“A smooth dolly-in toward the product on the table.”
Tracking shotCamera follows subject“A high-speed tracking shot following the car from behind.”
Pan left/rightCamera rotates horizontally“Slowly pan right to reveal the interior of the room.”
Tilt up/downCamera rotates verticallyTilt up from the character’s feet to their face.”
HandheldNatural human camera shake“A handheld shot with subtle organic movement.”
Static shotFixed camera, no movement“A static shot with zero camera movement, locked focus.”

4. The Power of Repetition

For commercial consistency, redundancy is your friend. If a detail must stay 100% the same, repeat it in your “Lock Block”:

“Keep the same face, same hairstyle, same outfit, and same body proportions throughout. No flickering.”

5. Design for “Post-Production”

A common mistake is trying to generate perfect text within the AI video. AI models often distort typography.

  • The Pro-Way: Generate a clean visual “Hero Shot” first, then add your slogans, subtitles, and UI copy using professional editing software.

6. “Sprint” Before You “Marathon”

Don’t waste credits on long, 15-second generations until you are sure the prompt works.

  • Test Phase: Generate 4–5 second “Short Tests” to check identity and motion.
  • Production Phase: Once the prompt is stable, generate the full-length version.

7. Use “Shot-by-Shot” Prompting

For complex narratives, treat your prompt like a storyboard. Break the video into distinct shots:

  • Shot 1: Macro close-up of texture.
  • Shot 2: Wide-angle reveal.
  • Shot 3: High-energy hero shot.

Advanced Troubleshooting Cheat Sheet

To Fix This…Do This…
Motion ArtifactsChange “fast” to “medium speed” or use a @Video motion reference.
Hand/Face DistortionAdd: “Hands with perfect anatomy, clear facial features, no flickering.”
Randomness/DriftingUpload more reference images (up to 9) to “lock” the visual environment.
Long-Form NarrativeGenerate a perfect 5s clip, then use the Extend Video feature to continue.

Why Seedance 2.0 Prompts Feel Like Directing a Movie

Seedance 2.0 raises AI video creation to a new level. Instead of fighting random outputs, creators can now guide characters, camera, motion, and sound with near-director precision.

With the right Seedance 2.0 prompt structure, you can go from a simple idea to a cinematic, high-retention AI video that looks professionally produced.

2026 Latest Update: Where to Execute Your Prompts Without Restrictions

As of 2026, the biggest challenge for AI directors isn’t writing the perfect prompt—it’s getting past the login screen. While Seedance 2.0 remains heavily gated behind Chinese regional verifications and strict platform constraints, and other official platforms demand steep $200/month paywalls or face sudden unavailability, your highly crafted prompt templates are useless without a stable rendering engine.

You no longer need to waste time hunting for temporary beta accounts, bypassing IP blocks, or waiting for invite codes. The most efficient strategy for creators today is deploying these exact director-style prompts on a unified platform that guarantees uninterrupted, cross-model access.

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