The result is more than a paragraph. It gives you a clearer shot plan and a cleaner draft to refine.
Seedance 2.0 Chat
This tool helps you turn a rough idea into a prompt you can actually use. Instead of typing one vague paragraph into a generator, you can sort out the scene goal, camera direction, pacing, constraints, and revision notes first, then move forward with a cleaner Seedance-ready brief.
What Comes Back
Use it for cinematic scenes, product ads, stylized clips, social shorts, and image-to-video work.
The tool keeps your dominant input language so the final prompt is easier to use right away.
Generate a copy-ready Seedance 2.0 prompt
Describe the idea in any language. The tool keeps that language, organizes the scene logic, and returns a prompt you can copy straight into your generator.
Useful inputs usually mention the subject, action, setting, tone, camera feel, and the result the clip should deliver.
Start from a close brief, then adapt it to your own brand, motion, and pacing.
Advanced Controls+
Use this for constraints the model should keep, avoid, or never ignore.
Use this field for details the prompt should keep, avoid, or never ignore.
After you enter an idea, the right side returns a structured prompt that is ready to copy.
You can write in English, Chinese, Japanese, Spanish, or mixed-language briefs. The result stays in the same dominant language.
Paste in a rough idea, keep only the constraints you actually need, and the result area turns that brief into a cleaner Seedance production draft.
The output starts with a short summary, then the final prompt, then follow-up refinements.
The tool starts with a short summary so users understand what the prompt was optimized for.
The main output is a single copy-ready Seedance prompt that can go straight into the homepage generator.
The final block adds follow-up edits so users can keep iterating without rewriting the brief.
Inputs and Outputs
This tool is here to get the brief into usable shape first
The point is not to make the prompt longer. It is to make the subject, action, camera, constraints, and revision path clearer before you generate.
What you enter
Start with the idea, the goal of the clip, and any constraints that matter. If you already know the mood, camera feel, or reference behavior, add that too.
What the tool returns
You get a cleaner Seedance-ready prompt, a short generation summary, and follow-up directions for the next round of refinement.
How references fit in
This page is useful even before you upload anything. It helps you decide what reference material the scene still needs and what each reference should control.
How to keep improving it
The best next edit is usually specific: fix motion, strengthen the hook, simplify the scene, preserve identity, or tighten the ending.
How it works
Turn a rough idea into a cleaner prompt in four steps
Open the tool first, get a usable draft fast, then refine it with a clearer target instead of guessing your way through another generation.
Describe the clip
Start with the subject, the scene goal, the format, and anything you already know about mood, audience, or references.
Pick the lane
Choose whether this is a scene, ad, stylized clip, social short, or image animation so the structure matches the job.
Generate the draft
The tool returns a more usable prompt, a clearer scene frame, and a better base for the next round.
Refine the weak spot
Tighten the part that actually missed: motion, camera logic, scene density, identity stability, hook strength, or CTA timing.
Prompt lanes
What kinds of prompts this tool is good at
The tool is most useful when the scene already has a job to do. These are the lanes people usually start with.
Cinematic scenes
For mood, shot progression, camera movement, and scenes that need a stronger sense of direction.
Product ads
For launches, material close-ups, reveal shots, benefit sequences, and cleaner CTA endings.
Anime and stylized clips
For strong visual language, dramatic lighting, transformation beats, and stylized motion.
Social shorts
For vertical hooks, faster pacing, creator-style rhythm, and platform-native scene structure.
Image animation
For turning still references into moving shots without losing the original identity, composition, or atmosphere.
Before and after
How the tool cleans up a rough brief
These examples show the difference between a loose request and a prompt structure that is easier to generate, review, and revise.
Cinematic reveal
A lone astronaut enters an abandoned train station on Mars. The scene should feel quiet at first, then shift into a tense discovery shot.
- Beat 1: slow entrance, wide frame, drifting dust, low radio hiss
- Beat 2: push in toward a flickering sign and helmet reflection
- Refine next: increase red haze and strengthen the metallic echo
Product ad sequence
Launch a skincare serum with a premium lab aesthetic, fluid macro shots, and a clean brand CTA in the final second.
- Open with glass reflections and a slow macro pan across the bottle
- Mid section: droplet texture, cold lab lighting, elegant hand movement
- Refine next: shorten the CTA transition and clean up the highlight roll-off
Image animation prompt
Animate a still portrait of a violinist on stage so the camera glides slightly and the lighting breathes with the music.
- Keep facial identity stable while adding controlled performance motion
- Add gentle camera drift, soft spotlight bloom, and curtain depth
- Refine next: reduce exaggerated arm movement and protect posture consistency
Why use this instead of writing from scratch
Less guesswork, more usable direction
The point of chat is not to sound smarter. It is to help you get to a prompt that is easier to generate and easier to improve.
Clearer structure
You get scene logic, camera direction, and revision handles instead of one vague wall of text.
Faster iteration
It is easier to keep moving when each revision has a clear target like motion, pacing, lighting, or hook strength.
Lower prompt risk
Structured drafts help reduce overloaded scenes, conflicting style cues, and weak shot direction.
Next Step
Once the prompt is cleaner, move into the prompt library, showcase, and pricing
This page turns a rough idea into a more usable brief. After that, the useful next move is usually to inspect the Seedance Prompt Library, compare output in Seedance Showcase, or check which Seedance Pricing plan fits your usage.
FAQ
What people usually ask before using Seedance 2.0 Chat
These are the practical questions that come up before someone starts generating.
What is Seedance 2.0 Chat for?
It is for turning a rough video idea into a clearer prompt, scene structure, and revision path before you generate.
Can it help with text-to-video prompts?
Yes. It is especially useful when you need stronger subject framing, action direction, camera notes, lighting, and pacing.
Can I use it for image-to-video work?
Yes. It is also useful for turning still references into motion-aware scene instructions without losing the original visual intent.