Seedance 2.0 Prompt Writing Guide: From Basic to Advanced
Master the art of writing effective prompts for Seedance 2.0. Learn the formula, best practices, and advanced techniques that top creators use.
The Anatomy of a Great Prompt
Every effective Seedance 2.0 prompt contains these core elements:
| Element | Description | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Subject | Who or what is in the scene | "A young woman with flowing auburn hair" |
| Action | What's happening | "slowly raises her gaze toward the camera" |
| Setting | Where and when | "in a misty bamboo forest at dawn" |
| Style | Visual aesthetic | "cinematic, film grain, moody atmosphere" |
| Camera | Shot type and movement | "slow dolly in, shallow depth of field" |
| Lighting | Light quality and direction | "soft golden hour light, volumetric rays" |
The Prompt Formula
[Subject] + [Action] + [Setting] + [Style] + [Camera] + [Lighting] + [Quality Tags]
Prompt Length Sweet Spot
30-100 words is the ideal range. Research shows:
- Too short (under 20 words): Generic, unfocused results
- Sweet spot (30-100 words): Specific, high-quality output
- Too long (150+ words): Model loses focus, contradictions arise
Best Practices
DO:
- ✅ Be specific and concrete
- ✅ Use one or two clear sentences
- ✅ Include motion descriptors ("slow motion", "gentle breeze")
- ✅ Add quality tags ("cinematic", "4K", "film grain")
- ✅ Describe camera behavior explicitly
DON'T:
- ❌ Use vague words ("cool", "nice", "interesting")
- ❌ Mix contradicting instructions ("static shot" + "camera spinning")
- ❌ Overload with multiple subjects
- ❌ Write paragraphs — keep it concise
- ❌ Use negative prompts (Seedance doesn't support them)
Style Keywords That Work
Quality Boosters
cinematic, 4K, 8K, HDR, high quality, photorealistic, hyperrealistic
Mood & Atmosphere
film grain, golden hour, blue hour, moody, ethereal, dramatic, serene
Camera & Lens
shallow depth of field, bokeh, anamorphic lens, wide angle, macro, tracking shot, dolly zoom, crane shot
Lighting
volumetric lighting, rim lighting, backlit, neon glow, soft diffused light, chiaroscuro
Advanced Techniques
1. Director References
Use well-known directors as visual shorthand:
- "In the style of Wes Anderson" → Symmetrical, pastel palette
- "Christopher Nolan style" → Epic scale, dramatic lighting
- "Wong Kar-wai aesthetic" → Neon-soaked, melancholic mood
2. Film Stock References
- "Shot on 35mm film" → Natural grain, warm tones
- "Shot on ARRI Alexa" → Clean, cinematic look
- "Kodak Portra 400" → Soft, warm skin tones
3. Multi-Action Sequencing
List actions in order for the model to follow: "The woman turns toward the window, then slowly reaches out to touch the glass, raindrops streaming down the other side."
4. Atmosphere Layering
Stack environmental details for rich scenes: "Fog rolling through, dust particles catching the light, leaves gently falling"
Category-Specific Tips
Portrait / Character
Focus on expression, gaze direction, and subtle movements. Add clothing details and skin texture descriptions.
Landscape / Nature
Emphasize atmospheric effects (fog, rain, light rays). Describe camera movement (drone shot, pan, timelapse).
Product / Commercial
Use studio lighting terminology. Describe rotation and surface reflections. Keep backgrounds clean.
Anime / Stylized
Reference specific anime styles. Add terms like "cel-shading", "speed lines", "dramatic poses".
Abstract / Experimental
Use artistic terms ("surrealist", "abstract expressionism"). Combine unexpected elements.