A high-quality, ultra-high-speed Japanese battle anime. Match the art style of the referen | Seedance
A High Quality Ultra High Speed Japanese Battle is presented as an edited case study, not a copy-ready prompt dump. Use it to study subject framing, camera direction, motion pacing, lighting choices, and reference coordination, then rewrite it for your own workflow.
Seedance2Prompt Editorial Team
Reviewed by: Seedance2Prompt Editorial Team
2026-03-12
Prompt detail pages start from approved examples, then the editorial team adds titles, usage notes, and related paths to make them reusable.
A high-quality, ultra-high-speed Japanese battle anime. Match the art style of the reference image. The unique characters from the input images appear one after another from the right side of the screen in an ultra-close-up against a blue sky, moving towards the left. They unleash intense, flashy effects (fire, water, lightning, earth, light, darkness, digital, etc.), magic circles, and luminescence with their unique weapons, filling the entire screen with special moves executed in various sharp, action-oriented motions. They quickly disappear into the back right as the next character emerges from the front to replace them. Each character stays in place for just a moment during the impact for an ultra-close-up decisive pose before quickly moving out of the frame via high-speed movement. The screen shakes with the impact. The camera performs an arc shot, circling and flying around, rapidly focusing on each character with high-speed dolly-ins and dolly-outs, and dynamically capturing them with a Dutch angle. The maximum time allotted for one character is 0.5 seconds. Ensure each character from the input images appears at least once. Maintain the faces, body shapes, and clothing of all characters exactly as they are in the input images. The last character executes the ultimate technique, ending the sequence. Use sharp direction with variations in movement speed.
How to work from this case
- Start with the original prompt and identify which subject, camera, and mood phrases drive the output.
- When iterating, change one variable first: lighting, motion, or emotion.
- If references are involved, adjust framing and movement separately for more stable generations.
Editorial handling note
Public prompt pages show edited case notes instead of copy-ready raw text. High-risk, explicit, and brand- or likeness-sensitive entries are filtered from the public library.
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