Seedance 2 Prompts Gallery

Seedance 2 prompts gallery with copy-ready motion prompts, shot ideas, camera move patterns, and a FAQ for Seedance 2 prompt writing.

More prompts load as you scroll

Seedance 2 prompts guide and FAQ

Seedance 2 prompts work best when you describe the subject that must stay recognizable, the action beat that should happen next, and the camera movement that sells the clip. Good prompts read more like a compact shot brief than a generic text prompt.

This page helps you study real motion prompt patterns before you start from a blank canvas. You can scan examples, borrow proven pacing language, and adapt them for product teasers, cinematic scenes, edit prompts, or storyboard-to-video workflows.

How to write stronger prompts for Seedance 2

  • Start with the stable subject and action, then add camera move, framing, and the emotional beat the clip should land on.
  • Call out the constraints that most affect motion quality: shot length, transition intent, speed, lens feel, subject continuity, and whether the clip should feel polished, playful, moody, or documentary.
  • When iterating, keep the parts that anchor the clip stable and change only one or two variables at a time, so you can tell whether the edit prompt, move, or lighting instruction actually improved the shot.

Prompt FAQ

What makes a Seedance 2 prompt different from a static image prompt?

A strong Seedance prompt has to describe time, not just appearance. It should tell the model what changes during the clip, how the camera behaves, and which subject details must stay consistent while motion happens.

How specific should I be about the camera?

Be specific when the camera move changes the feeling of the clip. Terms like push-in, handheld drift, locked-off frame, overhead tilt, or slow orbit often make the result more reliable than leaving motion implicit.

Can Seedance 2 prompts help with edit or remix workflows?

Yes. Seedance prompts are useful for pure generation, edit prompts, and storyboarding. The most reliable edit prompts tell the model what to preserve from the original shot and what new motion or mood should be introduced.