Faceless Channel — No-Camera Content Video Prompts
Input Specs — Seedance 2.0 Format
When generating a prompt, collect or infer:
| Field | Description | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Topic | Subject matter of the video | "The collapse of Silicon Valley Bank" |
| Platform | Target platform and aspect ratio | YouTube 16:9 / TikTok 9:16 / Reels 9:16 |
| Duration | Clip length in seconds | 5s / 8s / 10s |
| Mood | Emotional tone | cinematic / moody / energetic / calm |
| Style | Visual language | documentary / motion graphics / aesthetic / abstract |
| Sound priority | Narration-first or music-first | narration-first |
| Hook type | Opening pattern | visual metaphor / data reveal / satisfying loop / impossible scene |
Seedance 2.0 prompt structure:
[SCENE DESCRIPTION] — [CAMERA MOVEMENT] — [LIGHTING] — [MOOD/ATMOSPHERE] — [MOTION DETAILS] — [SOUND DIRECTION]
Each prompt block should be 15–25 lines covering: scene, camera, lighting, timing breakdown, motion notes, and sound direction.
Three Laws of Faceless Content
- Never let the screen rest. Every second needs motion — camera, subject, or both.
- The first frame is the thumbnail. The opening shot must be arresting on its own.
- Lighting is character. Without a face, emotion comes from color temperature, contrast, and shadow.
2-Second Hook Table
The first 2 seconds determine whether the viewer swipes. Use one of these four proven patterns:
| Pattern | Description | Visual Execution | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Visual Metaphor | Open on a powerful image that symbolizes the entire video's thesis | Extreme close-up of a burning dollar bill, then pull back to reveal a city skyline | Finance, business, history channels |
| The Data Reveal | Numbers or statistics materialize on screen in a visually dramatic way | Counter spinning rapidly then freezing on a shocking number, overlaid on relevant environment | News, education, statistics-driven content |
| The Satisfying Loop | A seamless, hypnotic motion that locks the eye before the brain can decide to swipe | Fluid pouring, sand falling, clouds rolling — perfectly timed to feel infinite | Meditation, ASMR, aesthetic channels |
| The Impossible Scene | A physically impossible or hyperreal visual that creates instant curiosity | A city at the bottom of the ocean, a forest growing in fast-forward inside a skyscraper atrium | Sci-fi, speculative, "what if" channels |
Visual Style Templates
1. Cinematic B-Roll
Best for: Documentary, history, finance, crime, geopolitics
- Color grade: teal-orange or desaturated with selective color pops
- Depth of field: shallow — always keep one plane soft
- Frame composition: rule of thirds strictly, negative space for text overlay
- Motion: slow push-ins and parallax reveals preferred; avoid handheld shake
- Texture: film grain overlay at 15–20% opacity adds perceived production value
- Key rule: never show the same environment from the same angle twice in one video
2. Motion Graphics Hybrid
Best for: Tech explainers, startup breakdowns, tutorials
- Blend live-action environment with floating UI elements, data flows, or particle systems
- Color palette: dark background (near-black), neon accent (electric blue, hot pink, or lime)
- Typography: kinetic text that materializes in sync with narration beats
- Motion: camera orbits around 3D elements; environment rotates slowly in background
- Light sources: internal — glowing elements, screens, holographic panels
- Key rule: every data point gets a visual representation, never just spoken
3. Ambient Aesthetic
Best for: Mindset, productivity, study-with-me, lo-fi, wellness
- Color grade: warm golden hour, cool twilight, or monochrome with single color pop
- Motion: ultra-slow — drift, float, breathe; never rush
- Subjects: coffee steam, rain on windows, pages turning, candle flames, neon reflections in puddles
- Camera: imperceptible push-in or very slow orbit; never a cut under 3 seconds
- Sound design: ambient sound leads, music is secondary texture
- Key rule: every frame should be screenshot-worthy as a wallpaper
4. Documentary Reconstruction
Best for: True crime, history, investigative journalism, case studies
- Color grade: desaturated, slightly green-shifted for "found footage" feel; or high-contrast black-and-white
- Camera: handheld simulation with subtle drift (not shake); occasional security-camera framing
- Subjects: empty locations that imply presence — a chair, a document, a phone screen
- Light: motivated by in-scene sources (desk lamp, phone glow, streetlight through blinds)
- Typography: timestamps, case numbers, location tags in Courier New or mono fonts
- Key rule: never show a face; imply the human through objects and traces
Camera Movement Library
Push & Pull
- Slow push-in (8–10s): Creates building tension. Use for reveals and escalating narration.
- Pull-back reveal: Starts tight on a detail, expands to show scale. Best hook technique.
- Crash zoom: Sudden fast push to a single element. Punctuates a data point or shocking stat.
Orbit & Rotate
- Slow orbit (360°, 10–15s): Best for product shots, architectural subjects, 3D elements.
- Partial orbit (45–90°): Shows depth without disorienting. Use on static subjects in environment.
- Tilt orbit: Orbits while tilting up or down — creates a sense of discovering the full scale of a scene.
Float & Drift
- Horizontal drift: Imperceptible lateral movement across a landscape or interior. Creates the feel of time passing.
- Vertical drift up: Rising slowly through fog, smoke, or a cityscape. Signals hope, scale, or transcendence.
- Vertical drift down: Descending into a scene. Signals going deeper, darker, or closer to truth.
Parallax & Depth
- Layer parallax: Foreground elements move faster than background. Creates depth in flat footage.
- Focus pull: Shift focus from foreground to background element (or reverse). Re-directs narrative attention.
Signature Moves for Faceless Channels
- The slide-and-reveal: Camera moves horizontally to reveal a new scene element. Replaces a cut.
- The breathe: A living still — minimal motion added to a static shot (0.5% drift + subtle zoom). Makes stills feel cinematic.
- The linger: Camera arrives at a subject and holds for 2s before continuing movement. Creates weight and anticipation.
Lighting Playbook
Moody Atmosphere
- 1 key light source maximum, deep shadows everywhere else
- Color temperature: 2700K–3200K (candlelight to tungsten)
- Practical lights in frame (lamps, screens, neon signs) add realism
- Use when: true crime, investigative, late-night aesthetic, conspiracy explainers
Clean Product
- Soft diffused light from camera-left or camera-right, subtle fill from opposite
- Color temperature: 5500K–6500K (daylight to cool daylight)
- High-key but not overexposed; preserve shadow for dimension
- Use when: tech reviews, unboxings, tutorial content, SaaS explainers
Nature Documentary
- Available light only — golden hour, blue hour, overcast diffusion
- High dynamic range: bright highlights, rich shadows; don't crush blacks
- Lens flares welcome at golden hour
- Use when: environment topics, travel, science, wildlife, philosophy channels
Urban Night
- Mixed color temperature — neon, sodium vapor, LED screens
- Highlight color contrasts: magenta/cyan, orange/blue
- Reflections on wet surfaces double the light sources in frame
- Use when: finance, city-life, nightlife, 24-hour news cycle, hustle content
Sound Design: Two Approaches
Narration-First
The voiceover carries all information. Visuals illustrate and punctuate.
- Music volume: 10–15% under narration, swell to 30% at natural breaks
- SFX: subtle ambient beds (room tone, city hum, wind); punctuation SFX only on major beats
- Music selection: no vo