Seedance 2.0 lands on Lovart AI
Seedance 2.0 launched globally on Lovart AI, offering multimodal referencing, cinematic motion control and temporal consistency to help direct image‑to‑video workflows. Artists on social platforms demonstrated full cinematic ad direction—camera moves, lighting and sound—inside the tool. ( )
Lovart has opened Seedance 2.0 to global users, putting ByteDance’s latest video model inside its workspace for image-to-video and multimodal video generation. (lovart.ai) Video generators turn text or images into moving clips; Seedance 2.0 also takes audio and video as references, so users can point to a camera move, a sound cue, or a lighting style instead of describing everything in words. ByteDance says the model supports text, image, audio, and video inputs in one system. (seed.bytedance.com, seed.bytedance.com) On Lovart, that reference workflow is packaged as a prompt system that accepts up to 9 images, 3 videos, and 3 audio files in one generation. Lovart says users can tag those assets with its “@” system to assign one file to style, another to motion, and another to lip-sync or mood. (lovart.ai) ByteDance officially launched Seedance 2.0 on February 12, 2026, describing it as a model for 15-second, multi-shot audio-video output with stereo sound, video extension, and editing controls. The company said the model was built for film, advertising, e-commerce, and game production. (seed.bytedance.com) Lovart’s pitch is less about a single clip than about direction: it says Seedance 2.0 can keep a character or scene consistent across multiple shots and follow instructions for lighting, shadows, and camera movement. Its feature pages also advertise 2K output, native audio generation, and cinematic camera commands such as dolly zooms and arc shots. (lovart.ai, lovart.ai) That addresses a common problem in artificial intelligence video tools: a face changes between cuts, motion looks weightless, or sound has to be added later in another editor. ByteDance says Seedance 2.0 was trained for stronger motion stability and joint audio-video generation, while Lovart markets the same model as a way to reduce “magic prompt” guesswork. (seed.bytedance.com, lovart.ai) The launch also lands after copyright and safety scrutiny around Seedance 2.0’s international rollout. In late March, South China Morning Post reported that ByteDance had added watermarking and intellectual-property guardrails ahead of a broader global expansion. (scmp.com) Lovart is pairing the model with its own automation layer, which it says can plan scenes, merge clips, and help preserve identity across angles. In recent Lovart posts and product pages, the company has promoted “no queue” access and longer-form generation workflows aimed at ads, music videos, and branded social clips. (lovart.ai, tiktok.com) The immediate result is that more of the directing stack now sits inside one interface: references, shot planning, generation, extension, and sound. The test for Lovart will be whether creators keep using those controls once the first wave of demo reels gives way to regular production work. (lovart.ai, seed.bytedance.com)