Seedance Guide
Seedance 2.0 Camera Movement Secrets
With the same character and scene, camera language can completely change perceived quality. This Seedance tutorial turns camera control into actionable prompt rules: what to write, how to combine moves, and how to avoid over-stylized but unreadable shots.

1) Core camera moves and where to use them
| Move | Best use | Risk |
|---|---|---|
| Push-in | Emphasis and tension | Too fast may cause discomfort |
| Pull-out | Spatial context | Subject detail may be lost |
| Follow | Action continuity | Over-shake reduces readability |
| Orbit | Atmosphere and ritual tone | Complex scenes may break geometry |
| Static | Maximum information stability | Can feel visually flat |
2) Seedance prompt formula for camera control
Recommended format: camera goal + movement path + speed + duration + stability rule.
Example:
Start in medium shot, slow push-in to close-up over 3 seconds, constant speed, keep subject centered, avoid shake and abrupt zoom.
3) Camera combination strategies
- Starter combo: static + light push-in (stability first)
- Narrative combo: follow + pull-out (action + space)
- Mood combo: orbit + slow push (emotion focus)
Validate single moves first, then combine.
4) Three common mistakes
- No speed definition, causing irregular motion.
- Contradictory instructions like static + heavy orbit in one shot.
- Camera instructions without subject tracking rules.
5) Fast tuning checklist
- Is the subject always readable?
- Does camera movement serve narrative, not just style?
- Are transitions rhythmically layered?
- Do style words conflict with camera words?
Template this checklist and update it with current Seedance news practices for steady quality gains.