Structure
This hub keeps only summary cards. Full prompt logic, settings, and troubleshooting live on each dedicated detail page.
Video Prompt Desk - Category 1
最終更新:
Copy-ready Seedance 2.0 prompts and prompt-to-video workflows with tested image-to-video and text-to-video examples, camera movement workflows, negative prompts, and practical troubleshooting for consistent cinematic first drafts.
This page targets high-intent Seedance 2.0 video prompts use cases with practical cinematic prompt templates, tested examples, and production-ready troubleshooting.
This hub keeps only summary cards. Full prompt logic, settings, and troubleshooting live on each dedicated detail page.
Test each prompt in short runs first. Change one variable per rerun so results stay explainable.
Each card shows a reference still. Final generated video evidence is kept on the detail page for that specific prompt.
These sections are organized for practical production work, not keyword stuffing.
This page intentionally shows concise previews only. Open each detail page for full prompts, negative prompts, complete settings, troubleshooting, and generated video output.
Prompt 1
Alternate-history parody selfie vlog of Washington crossing the Delaware in extreme winter.

A photoreal historical parody selfie clip with intense winter atmosphere and believable movement.
View full prompt detailsPrompt 2
Epic pirate character showcase with a tropical island pullback reveal.

A cinematic pirate portrait that opens into a wide island reveal with strong adventure-film energy.
View full prompt detailsPrompt 3
Horror-style found-footage jump-scare clip for social hooks and trailer inserts.

A tense VHS-style found-footage clip where the creature rushes the lens with believable panic motion.
View full prompt detailsPrompt 4
Cinematic cyberpunk product-style close-up for tech trailers, teasers, and high-impact social intros.

A high-contrast cyberpunk close-up where the laser iris rotates, pulses, and scans with believable mechanical behavior.
View full prompt detailsPrompt 5
High-altitude supersonic selfie sequence for action teasers and viral cinematic social hooks.

A high-energy selfie clip with visible fighter-jet pilot, cape turbulence, afterburner glow, and convincing speed cues.
View full prompt detailsPrompt 6
Casual Hogwarts smartphone footage style for viral social clips and character-reaction edits.

A believable amateur smartphone clip with natural micro-expressions, mild focus breathing, and awkward reaction timing.
View full prompt detailsPrompt 7
Tactical ocean-action hero portrait for viral short clips, cinematic intros, and military-style concept edits.

A gritty tactical ocean portrait where the harbor seal stays identity-consistent while surf, droplets, and gear highlights animate naturally.
View full prompt detailsPrompt 8
High-energy automotive drift sequence for cinematic intros, social hooks, and motion-focused teaser edits.

A cinematic drift shot with stable car identity, dense leaf spray motion, and strong wet-road taillight reflections.
View full prompt detailsPrompt 9
Brand-parody meme framing for social hooks with cinematic fire behavior and character-led reaction beats.

A gritty 90s-style parody clip with readable match extinguish action, drifting smoke trails, and consistent fire backlight during the turn-away motion.
View full prompt detailsUsually yes. Seedance 2.0 prompt guide queries often overlap with prompt to video intent. Keep one clear motion direction and one camera path so cinematic outputs stay readable.
Launch with at least 8 to 12 complete prompts. Then update weekly with new tested prompts and output evidence.
Use image to video prompt mode when first-frame composition must stay fixed. Use text to video prompt mode for fast ideation when visual continuity is less strict.
Camera movement prompts constrain motion behavior into one readable path. Keep one main move per run to avoid drift in cinematic AI video outputs.
Use this order: subject, action, environment, camera, lighting, pacing, and one style phrase. This cinematic prompt template keeps a movie trailer prompt focused and explainable.
Yes. A stable shot list prompt can be reused across Seedance 2.0 prompt tests; change only one variable per rerun so you can see what actually improved.