Seedance 3 Examples: Concept Use Cases, Not Official Demos

These are concept scenarios describing how a future Seedance 3 model might be used. They are not real Seedance 3 outputs and should not be treated as official demonstrations.

Concept: AI-generated video showcase reel

Why Concept Examples Are Useful

Even without an official product, exploring potential use cases helps creators think about what they would want from a next-generation video model. These scenarios are based on the trajectory established by Seedance 1.0 through Seedance 2.0.

Narrative Film Scene Concept

A three-minute short film scene following a detective entering an abandoned building, discovering evidence, and making a phone call. Multiple camera angles, consistent character appearance, ambient sound design, and dialogue with realistic lip-sync. This represents the kind of longer-form, narratively coherent output creators hope for.

Product Ad Concept

A 60-second luxury watch commercial with multiple environments: workshop craftsmanship shots, lifestyle scenes on a yacht, and macro detail shots of the mechanism. Consistent product appearance across all scenes, premium lighting, orchestral background music, and no visible AI artifacts.

Dialogue Scene Concept

A two-character conversation scene lasting 90 seconds with natural turn-taking, emotional progression, and environmental awareness. Characters react to each other's expressions, voices carry appropriate emotion, and the camera work follows conversational flow.

Music Video Concept

A three-minute music video with synchronized visual transitions matching beat changes, consistent performer identity across multiple settings, and creative visual effects that respond to the audio track. Seamless style continuity throughout.

Storyboard-to-Scene Concept

A production workflow where a creator uploads a series of storyboard sketches and the model generates video that faithfully follows the planned composition, camera angles, and narrative flow of each panel while adding cinematic quality, motion, and sound.

What Real Official Demos Would Need to Confirm

  • Actual output quality at the claimed duration
  • Real character consistency across extended sequences
  • Genuine dialogue quality and lip-sync accuracy
  • True multimodal input flexibility
  • Practical editing and extension capabilities
  • Real-world generation time and cost