AI video used to be utterly bad. (We’ve all seen Will Smith eat spaghetti more times than we can count, so I’ll spare you.)
Last year, however, we really began to see AI video take off with front-runners like Google’s Veo 3 series and Kling from Kuaishou. With each new model release, we inched toward improvements with prompt adherence, audio integration, and solving the “AI look.”
Seedance 2.0 is the largest step change we’ve seen in months. You can make movies with this thing.
A catastrophic collision between two massive space stations in low Earth orbit. Metal shears apart in slow motion as the stations grind into each other, sending a hailstorm of debris spiraling outward. Entire modules crumple like tin cans. Pressurized compartments blow out in violent bursts of crystallizing atmosphere. Solar panels shatter and cartwheel into the void. The camera tumbles through the wreckage as an astronaut ragdolls past, arms flailing. Explosions ripple down the station spine. Earth looms enormous in the background, serene and indifferent. Hyper-realistic, catastrophic scale, ISO debris field, 8k, Gravity collision sequence energy.
A daring aerial rogue diving on a bio-mechanical glider through a chaotic floating-island bazaar, weaving effortlessly through airborne merchants, dodging passing airships, flocking griffins, and tethered trading posts. He plummets past crumbling stone arches, busy rope bridges, and cascading waterfalls, barrel-rolling through narrow gaps with precision and style. Cinematic tracking shots follow his descent, enhanced by dynamic motion blur and ethereal dappled sunlight reflecting off crystal formations and mist. The sky-city pulses with an energetic fantasy vibe—flapping wings, shouting vendors, and nonstop vertical motion. Ultra-realistic detail with an epic high-fantasy action aesthetic, capturing speed, agility, and fearless momentum through the clouds.







