Turn ideas, reference images, and product concepts into cinematic AI videos with natural motion, camera language, and reusable prompts.
Seedance 2.1
Start with a prompt, choose aspect ratio, model direction, and creation mode, then open the video workspace with the same idea ready to use.
Use this as a quick storyboard box. Your prompt opens in the full AI video generator so you can continue without rewriting it.
Study prompt patterns for one-take action, product commercials, camera storytelling, sound-aware scenes, and stylized AI video creation.
A hand-drawn car sketch on paper. The camera pushes in as the pencil lines rise off the page, gain depth and color, and transform into a photoreal 3D car driving down a road.
An intense close-quarters fight scene featuring a short-haired female agent in winter tactical gear. She battles a mercenary inside a snowy military base, dodges a punch, counters with a vicious elbow to the visor, then follows with a heavy knee strike to the abdomen. Visible impact ripples, sweat and saliva spray, hand-held camera movement, white breath in the cold air, gritty texture, and high-contrast lighting.
A cinematic one-take sequence beginning with daytime Shibuya street noise, 8-bit game sounds, and layers of busy Japanese dialogue over shamisen plucks. The camera glides low as a schoolgirl in a JK uniform crashes into frame, hits hard, suddenly slows on the second beat, side-rolls, then races along the crosswalk with her skirt brushing the lens before exploding upward off a low wall and pulling the camera into the air.
An ultra-luxury perfume advertisement with dreamy electronic sound design and grounded percussion. The camera starts in macro view on a transparent rectangular perfume bottle wrapped in surging purple liquid, with bubbles, splashes, and crisp water sounds. The sequence dissolves into rippling liquid surfaces, floating iris flowers, and dramatic still-life bottle shots refracting soft, dreamy light.
A movie-grade action long take following a Chinese boy carrying a paper kite as he dashes through crowded alleyways, jumps stair sets, twists through a landing, and charges a raised platform for a difficult leap, with the drum hit exploding on impact. The entire piece stays in one continuous shot, with clear weight, inertia, and landing compression, evolving from Makoto Shinkai-inspired luminous realism into explosive ink-wash motion between seconds six and ten.
Let the camera serve the story rhythm: push in when emotion tightens, widen when the scene needs context, and make every transition feel driven by narrative purpose.
Seedance 2.1 is positioned as a focused AI video creation workspace for people who want motion, camera logic, and story-ready clips without a heavy editing setup.
Describe the subject, action, lighting, camera move, and mood to quickly create a video direction.
Start from product stills, character references, key visuals, or campaign images when you need controlled motion.
Plan one-take shots, macro commercials, action beats, camera pushes, reveals, and stylized transitions.
Keep the workflow simple while covering the controls creators need before generating a video.
Start with the video idea instead of learning a complex timeline first.
Use existing images as a visual anchor when product shape, character identity, or brand look matters.
Prepare videos for widescreen ads, vertical shorts, square posts, and product placements.
Move from idea to preview faster, then refine the prompt and continue in the full workspace.
Signed-in users can keep track of generation activity and return to previous outputs.
Use video-to-video style prompts when you want to reshape motion, mood, or scene treatment.
A simple path from idea to generated video.
Describe the subject, movement, lens, camera path, mood, and output format.
Pick text-to-video, image-to-video, or video edit, then choose the format you need.
Create the clip, preview it, download it, or keep iterating with a clearer prompt.
The first questions most new users ask before creating videos.
Open the video workspace, write your first scene, and turn it into motion.