Seedance Pro AI Video Generator
Create high-quality fantasy video clips with consistent motion and strong character fidelity.
Key Features
Text‑to‑Video and Image‑to‑Video generation
Smooth motion with controllable camera movement
Good subject consistency across frames
Prompting guide and docs linked for best practices
Great for RPG cutscenes, reels, and concept clips
Prompting Tips (T2V & I2V)
- Step 1
Start with the scene
Summarize setting, subject, mood, and action in one sentence.
- Step 2
Add camera and motion
Specify movement (slow dolly, pan, tilt) and shot type (close‑up, medium, wide).
- Step 3
Keep duration concise
Begin with 5–10s clips to maintain motion quality and narrative clarity.
- Step 4
Use reference frames (I2V)
Provide a still image to lock composition, subject identity, and palette, then describe the motion.
Example Prompts
Text‑to‑Video: medium shot of an elven ranger walking through misty pines at dawn, slow dolly forward, soft golden backlight, calm mood, cinematic color grade, 8s
Text‑to‑Video: cozy tavern interior, bartender pours ale, gentle camera pan left, warm lantern light, shallow depth of field, 6s
Image‑to‑Video: use reference portrait of a knight; subtle head turn and blink, soft window light, barely perceptible camera push‑in, natural color, 5s
Image‑to‑Video: city rooftop at night reference; wind moves cape, neon reflections on wet tiles, slow tilt up to reveal skyline, moody blue‑teal grade, 7s
💡 Click the copy button to use these prompts in your own generations
Model Capabilities for Seedance Pro
Strengths & Limitations
Strengths
- Consistent subjects with natural motion
- Clear control over camera movement
- Works well for fantasy and cinematic shorts
Limitations
- Long clips may reduce motion coherence
- Complex multi‑subject action may need iteration
About Seedance Pro
Seedance Pro enables both text‑to‑video and image‑to‑video workflows. Use it to craft short cinematic beats—character moments, environmental reveals, and soft camera moves—with strong identity preservation and a straightforward prompting style.
When to Choose Seedance
Choose Seedance when you want quick, cinematic clips for RPG cutscenes, reels, and mood videos. For fine‑grained per‑frame edits, finish in a video editor after generation.
Docs & Guide
See the prompting guide and API docs linked above for detailed parameters, recommended settings, and resolution options.
Seedance Pro vs Other Video Models
Seedance Lite
- Lite is faster/cheaper for drafts; Pro is higher‑quality for finals.
- Draft in Lite, finalize in Pro for best efficiency.
- Both support T2V/I2V and controlled camera moves.
- Identity stability strong on both with clean references.
- Pick based on polish vs. speed/budget.
Kling 2.5 Turbo Pro
- Kling emphasizes cinematic camera and temporal stability; Seedance Pro emphasizes motion/body nuance.
- For hero/product shots and cinematic language, Kling; for choreography nuance, Seedance Pro.
- Both output 1080p and work for vertical/social.
- Use concise motion verbs on both for clean results.
- Combine in edits for variety.
Wan 2.5
- Wan 2.5 provides one‑pass VO sync; Seedance Pro focuses on motion quality.
- For VO‑led explainers, Wan 2.5; for expressive body/gesture, Seedance Pro.
- Both handle 5–10s clips well.
- Pick by audio integration vs. motion nuance needs.
- Use both within a single campaign for breadth.
Luma Dream Machine
- Luma is cinematic with physics; Seedance Pro is motion/gesture‑centric.
- For textured hero shots, Luma; for performance beats, Seedance Pro.
- Both benefit from short clips and clean references.
- Choose by art direction and choreography needs.
- Mix outputs in editorial for premium feel.
Veo 3
- Veo offers native audio; Seedance Pro pairs with separate audio/VO.
- For dialogue‑driven content, Veo; for dance/gesture precision, Seedance Pro.
- Both produce strong social deliverables.
- Budget and audio workflows guide the choice.
- Use Veo for narration, Seedance for performance inserts.