Seedance 2.5 Examples: 12 Video Ideas to Test When API Access Opens
A practical Seedance 2.5 examples library for product demos, ecommerce clips, social videos, cinematic shots, and API evaluation prompts.

Seedance 2.5 has search demand before public API details are settled. The useful way to prepare is to collect examples that can be tested the moment access opens.
This article is an example library, not a claim that every Seedance 2.5 API feature is already available. Use these examples as evaluation prompts and creative starting points.
Example categories
| Category | Best for | What to evaluate |
|---|---|---|
| Product video | Ecommerce, launch pages, ads | Object stability and material realism |
| Character scene | Storyboards, social clips | Identity consistency and body motion |
| Camera movement | Cinematic tests | Tracking, orbit, push-in, parallax |
| Environment | Travel, architecture, game scenes | Spatial consistency and lighting |
| Reference-based video | Brand assets, product catalogs | Whether references stay stable |
1. Premium product turntable
A ceramic perfume bottle on a glossy black pedestal rotates slowly under soft studio lighting. Camera holds a macro close-up, then pushes in toward the cap engraving. Luxury fragrance commercial, realistic glass, clean reflections, 6 seconds. Keep bottle shape and cap position consistent. Avoid extra text and distorted reflections.
Use this to test hard-surface consistency, reflections, and close-up detail.
2. App interface lifestyle shot
A designer sits at a clean desk using a tablet with a minimal project dashboard visible. Morning light enters from the left. Camera moves from an over-the-shoulder view to a close-up of the hand tapping the screen. Calm SaaS product demo style, 7 seconds. Keep UI layout stable. Avoid unreadable random text.
This is useful for SaaS and productivity products, but do not rely on generated text being accurate.
3. Food commercial
A chef drizzles honey over a stack of pancakes. The honey stretches in slow motion, berries glisten, steam rises subtly from the plate. Macro lens, warm morning kitchen, shallow depth of field, 6 seconds. Keep pancake shape and berry placement consistent. Avoid extra utensils entering frame.
Food examples reveal whether the model handles fluid motion and appetizing textures.
4. Fashion walking shot
A model wearing a structured cream coat walks across a stone courtyard at golden hour. Camera tracks sideways at waist height, fabric moves naturally in the wind. Editorial fashion film, soft shadows, 8 seconds. Keep face, coat, and silhouette consistent. Avoid extra limbs or changing outfit details.
This tests full-body motion, cloth movement, and identity stability.
5. Real estate interior reveal
A modern living room with floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking a city skyline. Camera starts in the hallway and glides into the room, revealing a sofa, coffee table, and warm sunset reflections. Architectural walkthrough, 9 seconds. Keep room layout stable. Avoid furniture changing positions.
Use this for spatial consistency and camera path quality.
6. Game trailer scene
A lone explorer enters a glowing crystal cave. Blue light reflects on wet rocks. Camera follows from behind, then rises into a wide shot revealing the cave scale. Fantasy adventure trailer, realistic particles, 10 seconds. Keep character outfit and cave geometry consistent.
This checks atmosphere, depth, and subject scale.
7. Social ad hook
First frame: a messy desk covered with sticky notes. A hand sweeps the notes away, revealing one clean notebook with a simple weekly plan. Fast satisfying transition, bright creator economy style, 5 seconds. Keep the notebook centered. Avoid random logos or text.
Good for testing attention-grabbing short-form transitions.
8. Manufacturing detail shot
A robotic arm places a small metal component onto a circuit board. Camera is locked in a close-up angle, precise mechanical motion, cool factory lighting, 6 seconds. Keep component scale and board layout consistent. Avoid sparks or unsafe effects.
Industrial prompts expose whether small moving parts remain coherent.
9. Travel mood shot
A quiet coastal road at sunrise. A small electric car drives along the cliff edge while waves crash below. Drone shot following from behind, natural light, cinematic travel film, 8 seconds. Keep car color consistent. Avoid impossible road curves.
Use this for landscape motion, parallax, and natural lighting.
10. Education explainer opener
A clean desk with a notebook, pencil, and small globe. The camera slowly pushes in as simple paper cutout shapes move into frame to suggest a lesson starting. Friendly educational video style, soft daylight, 6 seconds. Avoid unreadable text.
This is a safer direction than asking the model to generate exact diagrams or labels.
11. Fitness form demo
A fitness coach demonstrates a slow kettlebell deadlift in a bright gym. Side profile camera, stable tripod shot, clear body posture, 8 seconds. Keep anatomy realistic and movement controlled. Avoid extra people, warped hands, or changing kettlebell size.
Use human motion examples carefully and review outputs before publication.
12. Before-and-after creative test
An empty studio corner transforms into a finished podcast recording setup. Camera stays fixed while a desk, microphones, lights, and acoustic panels appear through smooth staged transitions. Clean creator studio aesthetic, 8 seconds. Keep perspective stable. Avoid abrupt object popping.
This tests transformation control and scene consistency.
Evaluation scorecard
| Score area | What to look for |
|---|---|
| Prompt adherence | Did the output follow the requested subject, action, and setting? |
| Temporal control | Did events happen in the right order? |
| Object consistency | Did products, rooms, props, or characters change? |
| Camera quality | Was the movement smooth and plausible? |
| Artifact rate | Were there warped hands, faces, text, or geometry? |
| Reusability | Could the output be used after one or two retries? |
FAQ
Are these confirmed Seedance 2.5 outputs?
No. These are example prompts to test when confirmed Seedance 2.5 access is available.
Why not include exact API code?
The public Seedance 2.5 API model ID and final parameters should not be guessed. Keep code configurable until official details are confirmed.
Which example should I test first?
Start with product turntable, fashion walking shot, and real estate interior reveal. Together they test object consistency, human motion, and spatial control.
Can these examples work on Seedance 2.0?
Yes. Running them on Seedance 2.0 first creates a baseline for later comparison.
Should I use brand names or celebrities in examples?
Avoid them unless you have the rights. Use owned products, original characters, and generic scenes.
What makes a good Seedance 2.5 example?
A good example has a clear subject, visible motion, a defined camera path, and a measurable failure condition.
Turn the Guides into API Workflows
Use these prompts and tutorials with API access when you are ready to build production video workflows.