Seedance 2.0 UGC Prompts: 7 Templates You Can Steal
Seven Seedance 2.0 UGC prompt templates ready to copy. Includes the VIDEO AI ME street interview, the Adidas sneaker hook, and four originals.

Seedance 2.0 UGC Prompts That Stop the Scroll
Your last Seedance 2.0 UGC clip probably looked like a stock actor pretending to be a creator. Too lit, too clean, no friction. That is what happens when Seedance 2.0 UGC prompts skip the camera identity and the negative cue list. Real UGC works because it does not look produced, and the model knows the difference if you tell it correctly. We have generated more UGC clips on Seedance 2.0 than I can count, both for VIDEO AI ME's own ads and for the brands using us, and the seven prompts below are the templates that keep working.
By the end of this post you will have 5 tested prompts you can paste into VIDEO AI ME tonight, plus the verbatim VIDEO AI ME and Adidas reference prompts as bonus skeletons. Each one comes with a Why this works breakdown so you can write your own variants in three minutes. Steal them. Modify them. Use them as the spine of your next ad set.
What Makes a Seedance 2.0 UGC Prompt Different
Seedance 2.0 UGC prompts need six ingredients to land: camera identity, subject anchor, location details, action beats, lighting, and a negative cue list. Miss any of them and the model drifts toward stock commercial polish. Lead every UGC prompt with UGC creator, iPhone handheld, harsh midday sun, and the model immediately biases toward phone footage with real imperfections.
Seedance 2.0 has a UGC mode hiding inside its training. You open it the same way you open cinematic or anime, by leading with the right style anchor. The phrase UGC creator at the start of a prompt instantly biases the model toward handheld phone footage, real lighting, and slightly imperfect framing. Add iPhone, harsh sunlight, and handheld and the bias gets even stronger.
The second thing that makes UGC prompts different is the way you handle dialogue. Real UGC creators talk directly to the lens. They look you in the eye. Your prompt needs to say that out loud. Write looks at camera, says, then put the spoken line in quotes. Seedance 2.0 produces the lip sync and the audio in one pass.
The third difference is negative cues. UGC ads die when library music or logo watermarks leak into the frame. The phrase No music, No logo, no text on screen at the end of every UGC prompt strips those defaults out. Use it every time. None of the seven templates below skip it.
Template 1: The Street Interview Multi-Shot
This is the single most important UGC prompt to learn. It teaches dialogue, multiple actors, multiple shots, and brand mentions in one paragraph.
UGC street interview style, multiple quick cuts on a busy downtown sidewalk in bright daylight. Shot 1: A young woman sprints toward the camera from ten meters away, stops abruptly, grabs the microphone and shouts: "VIDEO AI ME! You literally type a prompt and it makes a whole video. I'm not even joking!" Shot 2: A guy in a hoodie leans into the mic and says: "Wait it does UGC too? Like with real-looking people?" Shot 3: An older woman with sunglasses shakes her head in disbelief: "So you don't need to hire actors anymore? That's wild." Shot 4: A man eating a sandwich stops chewing, points at camera: "How much does it cost? Because I just paid two grand for a thirty second ad." Shot 5: The first girl runs back into frame from the side, bumps into the interviewer and yells: "Just use VIDEO AI ME! Trust me!" Filmed with iPhone, harsh midday sun, handheld shaky energy, fast jump cuts between each person, different street backgrounds each time. - No music, No logo, no text on screen.
Why this works. The opener locks the format and the lighting in one breath (UGC street interview, busy sidewalk, bright daylight). Each of the five shots has its own labeled person and their own dialogue line, which lets the model render five different faces with five different vocal tones in one generation. The recurring character (the first girl bookending the spot) gives the ad a callback. The closing line (Filmed with iPhone, harsh midday sun) reanchors the camera identity so the model does not drift into a slick ad look. To adapt this template, change the brand name, change the five lines, keep the structure exactly the same.
Want to test it on your own brand right now, paste this into VIDEO AI ME with your product name dropped into shot one and shot five.
Template 2: The Sneaker Hands-On Hook
The Adidas reference prompt is the cleanest single-shot UGC template you will see. One actor, one product, one location, one short script.
UGC creator, energetic Black man in his twenties standing in a concrete skatepark at golden hour, holding a brand new pair of white and neon green sneakers. He lifts them close to the camera lens, rotates them slowly saying: "Bro look at these. Feel that material." He drops them on the ground, slides his foot in, stomps twice, then jogs three steps and stops. He turns back to camera: "Insane comfort." Filmed with iPhone, warm sunset backlight, slight lens flare, handheld. - No music, No logo, no text on screen.
Why this works. The action runs as seven beats: lift, rotate, drop, slide foot, stomp, jog, turn. Seven beats is the upper limit of what fits in 6 seconds. Notice the dialogue is split into two short lines around the action, not piled up at the start. That gives the model a natural pause to render the foot slide and the jog, which is the visual hook of the ad. Golden hour and warm sunset backlight give the shot its color identity. To adapt this prompt for any product, swap the sneakers, change the location to match the brand vibe, and keep the seven beat action structure intact.
Template 3: The Kitchen Discovery Reaction
A single-shot reaction prompt that works for food, snacks, drinks, and supplements.
UGC creator, a woman in her thirties standing in her sunlit kitchen wearing an oversized white t-shirt, holding a small jar of chili crisp condiment. She unscrews the lid, leans in and sniffs, eyes go wide. She grabs a spoon, scoops a small amount, tastes it, then looks at the camera: "Okay this is dangerous." She immediately scoops another spoonful and laughs. Bright morning window light from the right, soft white walls, palette of warm cream, sun yellow, deep red. Filmed with iPhone, handheld, shallow depth of field. - No music, no logo, no text on screen.
Why this works. This template is built around a single emotional arc: skepticism to surprise to delight. The action runs as unscrew, sniff, eyes wide, scoop, taste, look at camera, talk, scoop again, laugh. The dialogue is one short line that doubles as a hook line you could use as the ad caption. The lighting is locked early (sunlit kitchen, bright morning window light from the right) so the warm tones stay consistent through the reaction. Swap the product for any food or drink and you have a discovery hook that converts. Use this for new launches, recipe collabs, or unboxing-lite content.
Template 4: The Mirror Try-On for Apparel
A fashion UGC template that does not need a runway or a real fitting room.
UGC creator, a young woman with curly hair standing in front of a full length mirror in a small bedroom. She is wearing an oversized cream linen shirt and wide-leg jeans. She turns slightly left, then right, checks the back over her shoulder, smiles at her reflection in the mirror, then looks directly at the camera in her hand and says: "This shirt is from the new drop. Sized down. Worth it." Soft window light from the left, warm wood floor, palette of cream, denim blue, oak brown. Filmed with iPhone front camera, slight handheld motion, shallow depth of field. - No music, no logo, no text on screen.
Why this works. The trick with try-on prompts is the mirror geometry. You name the mirror explicitly, you describe where the camera is (her hand), and you let the action happen in the reflection. Seedance 2.0 handles the mirror rendering well as long as you anchor the room and the light source. The dialogue is one line because try-on UGC is mostly visual, and the line is positioned at the end so the model has time to render the spin first. To adapt, swap the wardrobe and change the line. The mirror, room, and light cues should stay.
Have a sample drop you want to test, open VIDEO AI ME and run the prompt with your wardrobe variant in the second sentence.
Template 5: The Coffee Shop Recommendation
A tight outdoor UGC prompt for coaches, creators, and personal brands.
UGC creator, a man in his late twenties sitting at an outdoor cafe table with a flat white and an open notebook. He looks up from writing, points the phone at himself, smiles and says: "Three things I'm doing differently this month. One. I'm batching my video content on Sundays." He takes a sip of coffee, raises his eyebrows. Soft morning sunlight, blurred greenery in the background, palette of warm cream, espresso brown, sage green. Filmed with iPhone front camera, handheld, shallow depth of field, slight wind in his hair. - No music, no logo, no text on screen.
Why this works. This is the simplest of the seven templates and the one that scales the fastest. One person, one location, one camera angle, one line of educational dialogue. The slight wind detail is the cue that pushes it from looking studio fake to looking like a real outdoor selfie shot. Batching content on Sundays is a content hook line that doubles as the ad copy. To adapt for your niche, change the line to your one tip and pick a location that fits the brand. Coaches use cafes, fitness creators use parks, designers use studios.
Common UGC Prompt Mistakes
- Forgetting UGC creator at the start of the prompt. Without it the model defaults to a slicker commercial look.
- Writing dialogue without quotes. Seedance 2.0 reads the quotes as a signal to lip sync.
- Skipping the negative cue list. Without No music, No logo, no text on screen the model adds default music and watermarks.
- Using fancy camera language like jib, crane, or steadicam. UGC is handheld. Say handheld.
- Asking for fifteen seconds in one prompt. UGC follows beats best inside six to ten seconds.
- Naming generic adjectives like beautiful or stunning instead of concrete style cues like harsh midday sun.
How to Use These Prompts on VIDEO AI ME
Inside VIDEO AI ME you paste any of these seven prompts into the Seedance 2.0 generator, choose 9:16 for vertical UGC or 1:1 for square feeds, and pick 480p for testing or 720p for the final. If you have a specific actor in mind, upload a reference photo and the model uses it as the first frame so wardrobe and face stay locked. You can also pick from 300 plus stock actors if you do not have a face yet, and clone your own voice for the audio in 70 plus languages. We use these exact templates inside VIDEO AI ME to produce launch ads in under an hour. For more guides like this one, browse the VIDEO AI ME blog.
Wrap Up
Good UGC prompts are simple. Lead with the style anchor. Name the person. Write the action in beats. Put dialogue in quotes. Close with a negative cue list. The seven templates above all follow that exact pattern, and once you internalize it you will write your own in three minutes flat. Your next step is to grab the street interview skeleton, swap the brand name, and try Seedance 2.0 free on VIDEO AI ME before the rest of your ad set goes stale.
More Seedance 2.0 prompts to study
The four reference videos used throughout this guide (a multi shot street interview, a skatepark product UGC, an unboxing narrative with a timelapse, and a high energy gamer reaction) live as a full copyable library on Seedance 2.0 Prompt Templates: Copy Paste and Ship. Bookmark it and remix any of the four when you need a starting point.
Related Seedance 2.0 guides on VIDEO AI ME
If you want to go deeper, these guides pair well with this one:
- Make Explainer Videos With Seedance 2.0 in Under 10 Minutes
- The Seedance 2.0 Prompt Guide: 10 Rules That Always Work
- Seedance 2.0 Explainer Video Prompts That Convert
- Seedance 2.0 Cinematic Prompts: 35mm Looks From Plain Text
You can also browse the full VIDEO AI ME blog for more AI video tutorials, or jump straight into the product and try Seedance 2.0 free on VIDEO AI ME with no credit card.
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Paul Grisel
Paul Grisel is the founder of VIDEOAI.ME, dedicated to empowering creators and entrepreneurs with innovative AI-powered video solutions.
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