AI Avatar — Digital Persona Video Prompts
A complete system for crafting Seedance 2.0 prompts on Higgsfield that feature AI avatars, digital personas, virtual presenters, and synthetic characters as the primary subject. This skill covers everything from photorealistic digital humans to stylized 3D characters, including hook patterns, environment design, camera work, lighting, and audio direction.
1. Input Specs
Before generating prompts, gather the following from the user:
Character definition
- Avatar style: photorealistic human / stylized 3D / 2D animated / abstract-geometric
- Gender presentation, approximate age, and visual identity descriptors (if applicable)
- Skin tone, hair, wardrobe notes, or reference aesthetics
- Personality register: corporate, playful, authoritative, futuristic, warm
Content purpose
- Use case: product demo, brand spokesperson, educational content, virtual influencer post, sales video, onboarding clip
- Platform destination: Instagram Reel, YouTube, LinkedIn, TikTok, website hero
- Desired emotional response: trust, excitement, curiosity, aspiration
Technical requirements
- Clip duration: 2–4 sec / 6–10 sec / 15–30 sec
- Aspect ratio: 9:16 vertical / 16:9 landscape / 1:1 square
- Motion intensity: static with subtle animation / active gestures / high-energy movement
Brand constraints
- Color palette or forbidden colors
- Brand keywords or phrases the avatar should embody visually
- Any style references (films, games, other AI avatars)
2. Philosophy — Why AI Avatars Are the Future of Scalable Content
The uncanny valley problem — and how to avoid it
The uncanny valley is the psychological discomfort triggered when a synthetic human looks almost real but falls short in ways the brain cannot consciously articulate. Eyes that do not quite track. Skin that lacks micro-texture. Movement that is smooth but wrong. The brain pattern-matches to illness, deception, or death.
There are two reliable exits from the uncanny valley:
Exit 1: Go fully photorealistic. Push render quality, skin subsurface scattering, eye moisture, micro-expression, and hair fidelity past the threshold where the brain accepts the character as real. This requires explicit prompt language: "hyper-photorealistic skin texture," "subsurface light scattering on face," "wet corneal reflection," "micro-expressions," "natural breath movement."
Exit 2: Commit to stylization. A clearly stylized character — 3D cartoon, cel-shaded, geometric — never triggers uncanny valley because the brain never expected biological realism. Own the artifice. Make it beautiful and internally consistent.
The danger zone is the middle ground: a character that is clearly rendered but aspires to realism without achieving it. Avoid half-measures. Either push all the way to photorealism or lean fully into a defined non-realistic aesthetic.
Additional uncanny valley avoidance rules:
- Never describe eye movement without describing blink timing
- Always specify natural weight and momentum in gestures
- Avoid "perfect symmetry" — real faces are asymmetric
- Include micro-imperfections: a strand of hair out of place, slight asymmetry in the smile
- Ground the avatar with realistic environmental interaction: light falloff, shadow contact, hair affected by subtle air movement
3. Avatar Style Spectrum
Photorealistic Human
The most persuasive style for commercial and B2B content. Optimized for spokesperson videos, testimonials, and brand ambassadors.
Prompt markers: "photorealistic digital human," "hyper-realistic skin with visible pores," "subsurface scattering skin shader," "natural asymmetry in facial features," "wet corneal highlight," "professional studio grooming," "fine hair strands rendered individually"
Best for: SaaS product demos, financial services, healthcare, e-commerce spokesperson
Risks: Highest uncanny valley exposure — demand maximum fidelity or shift styles
Stylized 3D Character
Distinct personality with artistic intentionality. Strong brand identity potential. Avoids uncanny valley entirely.
Prompt markers: "stylized 3D character with smooth simplified geometry," "large expressive eyes," "exaggerated proportions with cartoon appeal," "cel-shaded render," "clean edge lighting," "Pixar-adjacent character design," "bold color palette skin tones"
Best for: Consumer brands, gaming, entertainment, apps, youth-oriented products
Risks: May feel low-trust for serious B2B content — calibrate style to audience
2D Animated
Flat or semi-flat illustrated character with motion. Highly distinctive, excellent for social media and explainer content.
Prompt markers: "2D animated character in motion graphics style," "flat illustration aesthetic," "bold outline strokes," "limited animation with expressive poses," "vector art quality," "anime-influenced design," "looping idle animation"
Best for: EdTech, productivity tools, startup explainers, social media content
Risks: Hard to convey facial nuance — lean on body language and motion design
Abstract / Geometric
The avatar is not a humanoid but a geometric entity — particle systems, fluid simulations, crystalline structures — that communicates through movement and light. Most experimental.
Prompt markers: "abstract digital entity formed from particles of light," "geometric crystalline structure with inner luminescence," "fluid simulation avatar morphing between states," "data visualization made sentient," "void-space entity with no fixed form"
Best for: Tech companies, AI products, concept content, high-concept brand films
Risks: Low relatability — pair with clear voice-over or text overlay
4. 2-Second Hook Patterns
The first two seconds determine watch-through rate. For avatar content, there are four proven hook architectures.
The Glitch-to-Perfect
Opens with visual corruption — static, scan lines, fragmented pixels, digital artifacts — then resolves into a clean, confident avatar. Communicates: synthetic origin, premium output.
Prompt language: "opens with heavy RGB chromatic aberration and scan line distortion, digital glitch artifacts fragmenting the face, resolves at 1.5 seconds into pristine clarity, sharp focus snapping to perfect render quality"
Use when: Launching an AI product, announcing new technology, establishing digital-native brand identity
The Digital Birth
The avatar materializes from nothing — particles assembling, wireframe filling, data streams converging into form. Communicates: creation, emergence, future.
Prompt language: "avatar assembles from scattered luminous particles converging to a central point, wireframe mesh fills with texture and color, form resolves from abstract to fully rendered in under two seconds, volumetric glow during formation"
Use when: Product launches, brand debut videos, origin story content, intro sequences
The Style Morph
The avatar rapidly shifts visual style — sketch to 3D to photorealistic, or multiple artistic styles in sequence — before landing on a final defined look. Communicates: versatility, creativity, range.
Prompt language: "avatar transitions through four visual styles in rapid succession: pencil sketch, flat 2D illustration, stylized 3D, photorealistic render, each held for 0.4 seconds, final state held as primary look, transitions use dissolve with chromatic fringing"
Use when: Creative agencies, design platforms, AI tools, content creation products
The Fourth Wall Break
Avatar makes direct, deliberate eye contact with the camera, creating the immediate impression of personal address. Can begin mid-gesture or mid-sentence — in media res. Communicates: directness, confidence, presence.
Prompt language: "avatar turns to face camera directly with deliberate intention, locks eye contact with subtle confident smile, slight lean forward, no introduction or preamble, as if resuming a conversation"
Use when: Sales content, coaching products, high-conversion landing pa