Seedance 2.0 Guide

AI video workflow

Create pro AI video with Seedance 2.0.

Seedance 2.0 is a multimodal audio-video model built for structured directing. Use text, image, video, and audio references together, then guide the model with clear roles, physical action, and shot-based timing.

9image references
3video references
3audio references
Seedance 2.0 visual identity

Mental model

Treat Seedance like a controlled directing system, not a poetic toy. Every reference needs a job, and every shot needs one readable action.

What Seedance 2.0 does best

It shines when you stop writing vague visual descriptions and start directing the model with scene logic, reference roles, physical motion, and clean constraints.

1

Multimodal control

Combine text, images, video, and audio in one generation. Use each file for a specific role: character, environment, camera rhythm, motion, audio, or style.

2

Shot continuity

Build scenes with a beginning, development, and payoff. A short beat structure gives the model temporal logic and keeps motion readable.

3

Physical action

Describe what bodies, objects, light, dust, fabric, vehicles, and environments actually do on screen. Tangible behavior beats abstract mood.

Core operating principles

These are the rules that keep Seedance generations controlled, readable, and cinematic.

1

One shot, one dominant action

Focus each frame on a single clear narrative or action point. Visual clutter lowers impact and makes the model guess.

2

Camera is not decoration

The camera path should serve the subject, story, or emotion. Do not add camera moves just because they sound cinematic.

3

Action must be physical

Prioritize visible behavior: falls, collisions, dust, fabric, fire, hands, eye movement, product interaction, and body mechanics.

4

Environment is active

The location should shape the action. Treat furniture, light, weather, crowds, streets, glass, walls, and props as part of the scene.

5

References need roles

Define exactly how external information is used. A reference can control identity, wardrobe, palette, composition, motion, rhythm, or ambience.

6

Structure beats length

A shorter prompt with hierarchy usually beats a long prompt full of competing ideas. Organize first, expand only where needed.

The Seedance workflow

Use this repeatable process before every generation, no matter which platform gives you access to Seedance 2.0.

Step 01

Choose the format

Decide whether you need a single-shot scene, multi-shot story, reference-based generation, continuation, POV, edit, extension, or detail shot.

Step 02

Upload references with roles

Never upload files as decoration. Label what each reference should control: identity, wardrobe, palette, composition, camera motion, blocking, speech rhythm, or ambience.

Step 03

Write one dominant action

Each shot should focus on one clear event. Avoid stacking too many actions, camera moves, style words, and character changes into the same moment.

Step 04

Build the shot script

For advanced results, write timecoded beats. Use a structure like establish, develop, payoff so the model understands progression across time.

Step 05

Generate, review, refine

If the result is chaotic, simplify the prompt. If style is ignored, adjust style weight. If identity drifts, fix the reference role. If camera resets, lock the camera path.

Main prompt modes

Choose the mode before writing. The mode determines how much control you need and how you should structure references.

Single-shot

One continuous readable event. Best for live performances, interviews, simple actions, and unedited footage.

Multi-shot

Linked beats across time. Best for transformations, mini narratives, product launches, explainers, and event highlights.

Reference-based

Use a source image, video, or audio file to guide character, scene, motion, camera, rhythm, or style.

Continuation

Extend a story or scene from a previous output while preserving continuity and avoiding repeated action.

Edit

Modify specific elements of an existing image or clip while keeping the rest of the scene stable.

Extension

Expand the canvas or scene from an image while preserving the original visual logic.

POV

Change the visual perspective or camera angle so the viewer experiences the scene through the subject.

Insert / detail shot

Add a detailed close-up or element shot to make the scene feel more complete and cinematic.

Reference roles

Seedance 2.0 can read multiple reference types, but every reference should have one job.

Image reference

Use images for identity, wardrobe, palette, composition, environment, product design, pose, or first/last frame anchors.

Video reference

Use video for motion rhythm, camera behavior, blocking, pacing, transition feel, choreography, or action timing.

Audio reference

Use audio for timing, speech rhythm, ambience, music energy, impact cues, or the emotional rhythm of the scene.

Bad: Use @Video1 for the scene. Good: Reference @Video1 for camera movement only. Use @Image1 for character identity and @Image2 for environment.

Prompt formula

Use this as the fast version when you do not need a full shot script.

[Subject], [Action], in [Environment], camera [Camera Movement], style [Style], avoid [Constraints]

Subject

Who or what appears. Be specific about visual features, wardrobe, identity, and role.

Action

What happens physically. Use precise verbs and visible motion instead of abstract emotion.

Environment

Where it happens. Include light, atmosphere, space, and objects that can interact with the action.

Camera

Use one primary movement: push-in, tracking, orbit, handheld, aerial, fixed, pan, or pull-out.

Style

Anchor the visual feel without creating adjective soup. Keep it focused and consistent.

Constraints

Tell the model what to avoid: jitter, bent limbs, identity drift, flicker, chaotic composition.

Multi-shot beat structure

For stronger narrative clips, use a simple three-beat structure instead of a loose paragraph.

Beat 1

Establish

Show the subject, environment, relationship, or problem. The viewer should understand the scene immediately.

Beat 2

Develop

Introduce motion, conflict, transformation, product use, camera progression, or a visible change in the scene.

Beat 3

Payoff

End with the result: impact, reveal, product moment, final pose, explosion, joke, reaction, or clean cinematic finish.

Continuation logic

When extending a clip, the model needs anchors. Tell it what to preserve and what must happen next.

Use a last-frame anchor

The continuation should start immediately after the final frame, not replay the previous action.

Use identity anchors

Preserve character, outfit, environment, emotional state, and camera direction unless you intentionally change them.

Use previous clip as memory

The previous video should guide continuity, not trap the model into repeating the same beat.

State what must not repeat

Add direct constraints like “do not repeat the previous action” or “continue from the final pose.”

Common mistakes

Most bad generations come from too much ambiguity, not from a weak model.

Prompt overload

Too many actions, references, camera ideas, and style words compete with each other. Remove everything that does not serve the main shot.

References with no roles

Do not just upload files and hope the model understands. Say exactly what each reference controls.

Camera as decoration

Camera movement must serve the story. Use one primary camera idea and keep subject movement separate from camera movement.

No hierarchy

Make the prompt easy to parse: style, duration, shot beats, consistency rules, and negative constraints.

Adjective soup

Too many style words dilute the result. Use one strong style anchor, then describe physical details that support it.

Contradictory identity

If character, outfit, age, face, or role references conflict, Seedance may drift. Give one clear identity source.

Changing too many variables

When refining, change one thing at a time: camera, style, reference, seed, duration, or prompt structure.

Literary emotion instead of behavior

“She feels powerful” is weaker than “she stands still, lifts her eyes, tightens her grip, and steps forward.”

Troubleshooting by symptom

Use this when a generation looks close but not quite usable.

Chaotic resultRefine prompts and seeds
Style ignoredAdjust style weights and simplify style language
Character driftRe-seed or fix identity reference roles
Camera resetsLock the camera path and reduce competing camera moves
Previous beat replaysTrim or edit input, then state the next action clearly
Motion feels fakeIncrease realism settings and describe physical mechanics
Clip feels unstableStabilize footage or tracking references