More stable styles across consecutive shots
Feature pages focus on the user task itself, helping people decide which capability fits the job and whether to continue to model pages, showcases, or direct creation.
Keep producing video shots around a fixed character identity and reduce style drift. This page focuses on how the same character can appear consistently across multiple scenes.
Feature pages focus on the user task itself, helping people decide which capability fits the job and whether to continue to model pages, showcases, or direct creation.
Feature pages focus on the user task itself, helping people decide which capability fits the job and whether to continue to model pages, showcases, or direct creation.
Feature pages focus on the user task itself, helping people decide which capability fits the job and whether to continue to model pages, showcases, or direct creation.
This section answers “what task am I trying to complete?” instead of “what is the model called?”, which works well for explicit intent queries like image-to-video or text-to-video.
Recurring characters in narrative scenes
IP character video accounts
Batch production for serialized content
If you already know the creative task you want to complete, use this table to decide whether to continue to a model page, a showcase, a guide, or the creation workflow.
| Task Signal | Best Page Type | Next Action |
|---|---|---|
| You need to judge capability boundaries and input requirements | Model topic and feature explanation | Read the model page and capability cards, then validate the output style in showcases. |
| You want to reproduce a specific video effect | Showcase and guide pages | Compare scenes, prompts, and storyboard structure before building your workflow. |
| You already have a script, character, or source asset | Creation workflow entry | Open the workspace and generate video from script, character, storyboard, or assets. |
It means the character maintains similar appearance, style, and recognizable traits across multiple shots or clips.
It suits short drama creators, IP character operators, and teams that need a steady stream of character content.
The model landing page explains base models like Seedance 2.0, while this capability page explains the concrete task of reliably generating the same character.
Feature pages explain the task scenario. From here, you usually continue to the supporting model page, real examples, and guides to complete the decision path.