A real inventory of prompts with preview media, source references, and copy-ready examples.
Seedance 2.0 Prompts
This page is for people who want real prompt patterns, not vague writing advice. You can use it to study how strong Seedance prompts are structured, compare categories, copy examples, and find a better starting point before moving into Seedance Chat or real output review.
The library spans multiple use cases instead of repeating one prompt style in different words.
Useful across text-led scenes, reference-driven work, camera-led prompts, and audio-aware clips.
A surreal battlefield in the sky: floating rock islands drifting through a thunderstorm, clouds swirling below like an ocean. The masked ronin dashes across the drifting platforms,...
A street food vendor in his 40s, broad shoulders, white apron, red bandana headband, stands behind a wok on a night market stall. Just as he prepares a dramatic toss, his phone sta...
a city street during a red light; everyone is stopped and waiting. a young man is on a bicycle with a ragdoll cat perched on the back. beside him, a beautiful young woman is on ano...
What makes a prompt useful
Good prompts save time before generation even starts
A useful prompt library does more than say "be more specific." It shows how people actually describe subject, motion, camera behavior, pacing, and visual intent so they do not have to guess through every retry.
Use prompts like reusable assets
Strong prompts are not one-off lines. They become reusable scene patterns for ads, story moments, stylized clips, and reference-driven work.
Structure matters more than length
A long prompt can still fail if it has no motion logic, weak camera direction, or conflicting style cues.
Examples teach faster than rules
That is why this page focuses on real prompts, preview media, and reusable writing patterns instead of generic best-practice slogans.
Prompt categories
The prompt clusters most people start with
These categories make the library easier to scan. Each one points to a real set of prompts underneath, not placeholder examples.
Prompt patterns for mood, scene progression, atmosphere, continuity, and story-driven motion.
Story scenes, trailers, cinematic concept videos
A surreal battlefield in the sky: floating rock islands drifting through a thunderstorm, clouds swirling below like an ocean. The masked ronin dashes across the drifting platforms,...
Prompt patterns for product framing, surface detail, lighting control, and commercial presentation.
Brand videos, product reveals, marketing clips
A street food vendor in his 40s, broad shoulders, white apron, red bandana headband, stands behind a wok on a night market stall. Just as he prepares a dramatic toss, his phone sta...
Prompt patterns for fast hooks, creator-style pacing, UGC energy, and short-form scene rhythm.
Reels, vertical clips, creator content
a city street during a red light; everyone is stopped and waiting. a young man is on a bicycle with a ragdoll cat perched on the back. beside him, a beautiful young woman is on ano...
Prompt patterns for exaggerated action, transformation beats, strong visual language, and stylized rendering.
Anime edits, stylized action, visual experiments
Live-Action Anime Adaptation · Breathing Technique Decisive Battle (15 seconds · Super Burning Special Effects Version) 【Core Focus】: Water Breathing (Blue Water Dragon) VS Thunder...
Prompt patterns for turning still images or references into moving shots without losing identity or composition.
Animating references, character reuse, scene continuity
参考视频 1 (场景视频)进行人物 2 的 动作(动作捕捉视频),用图片 3 的人物生成视频
Prompt patterns that line up rhythm, music, voice, or audio cues with visual pacing and atmosphere.
Music-led edits, rhythm scenes, voice-aware timing
0-2 seconds (Shot 1) - Visuals: The bridge shakes violently, steel cables snap with exploding sparks, a multi-car pile-up occurs, people scream and run in chaos. - Camera: Handheld...
Prompt patterns built around tracking, dolly, orbit, crane, and other shot-driven camera cues.
Dynamic shots, reveal sequences, motion-led scenes
A surreal battlefield in the sky: floating rock islands drifting through a thunderstorm, clouds swirling below like an ocean. The masked ronin dashes across the drifting platforms,...
Full Seedance Prompt Library
Copy prompts, preview media, and compare how different scenes are written. The library below uses the real prompt dataset already powering examples across the site.
Prompt structure
A repeatable way to write better Seedance prompts
Useful prompts usually answer the same core questions in a stable order. Treat these blocks as a guide, not a rigid template.
Subject
Who or what is on screen, including appearance, material, costume, product detail, or visual identity.
Action
What changes over time: movement, gesture, interaction, transformation, or progression across the shot.
Camera
State the shot feeling or movement clearly: tracking, dolly, orbit, push-in, close-up, wide reveal, or handheld drift.
Lighting
Name the light quality and direction so the shot reads with a clearer mood instead of a generic visual wash.
Environment
Describe the space and the atmospheric details that matter: weather, debris, fog, surfaces, or architecture.
Pacing
Clarify whether the clip should feel explosive, restrained, rhythmic, slow-burn, or ready for fast editing.
Sound
If music, ambience, or dialogue matters, write it directly so timing and energy line up better.
Mood
Lock the emotional read at the end: tense, luxurious, surreal, intimate, ominous, heroic, or calm.
Common mistakes
Why prompts become noisy, flat, or unstable
Weak output usually comes from prompt ambiguity, not from the model randomly ignoring instructions.
Too vague
Generic wording leaves too many possible interpretations, which weakens motion, style, and scene control.
Too many ideas at once
Packing several different concepts into one prompt often creates conflict instead of richer storytelling.
No camera language
If the prompt never describes the shot, composition, or movement, the result often feels flat or visually generic.
Conflicting style instructions
Mixing aesthetics that do not belong together makes it harder to preserve scene coherence across iterations.
Prompt FAQ
Prompt FAQ
These are the questions that usually matter before someone can turn a prompt into a usable scene.
Next Step
Once you find a useful prompt pattern, move into showcase, chat, and pricing
This page is best for finding useful patterns and reusable structures. After that, the useful next move is usually to compare real output in Seedance Showcase, take one of these patterns into Seedance Chat, or check whether Seedance Pricing matches your usage.
Seedance Chat
Turn rough ideas into a clearer scene brief and prompt structure.
Seedance Showcase
Evaluate real outputs, style quality, and commercial fit through examples.
Seedance Pricing
Choose a plan based on output volume, iteration pace, and commercial usage.
Text to Video
Start from words and structure subject, action, camera, and atmosphere.
Image to Video
Animate references while preserving identity, composition, and continuity.
Audio to Video
Use dialogue, music, or rhythm to shape sync, gesture, and shot timing.
Next steps
Use the library to find patterns, then push them further
Once you find a prompt structure that fits, the next step is usually to refine it in Seedance Chat, compare it against real examples in Seedance Showcase, or decide whether the workflow fits your production volume.