Skip to content
AI Primer
deal

InVideo adds Seedance 2.0 with unlimited paid access through April 17

InVideo added Seedance 2.0 with unlimited paid access through April 17. Mitte launched the same model with half-price credits through April 20, and creators are comparing 21:9 support and face-reference behavior across platforms.

5 min read
InVideo adds Seedance 2.0 with unlimited paid access through April 17
InVideo adds Seedance 2.0 with unlimited paid access through April 17

TL;DR

  • CharaspowerAI's launch post says InVideo turned on Seedance 2.0 for paid users with unlimited access through April 17, while InVideo's model page lists 15 second HD generations, multimodal inputs, and global availability for businesses outside the US and Japan.
  • Anima Labs' collab post says Mitte added the same model and cut credits in half through April 20, while Mitte's homepage says Seedance 2 is available on all paid plans and Mitte pricing shows the free tier includes zero Seedance 2 videos.
  • Creators are already using Seedance 2 across platforms for very different workflows: Artedeingenio got an image-to-video result from an older Niji 6 still with no extra prompt, while CharaspowerAI's FPV test leaned on unlimited experimentation inside Runway.
  • The practical platform differences are getting noticed fast. ai_artworkgen's reply points to 21:9 support in Freepik, and Runway's Seedance 2.0 help page lists 21:9, 16:9, 4:3, 1:1, 3:4, and 9:16 output ratios.
  • A small but telling community note from ozansihay claimed realistic face restrictions appear to be loosening on several Seedance 2.0 hosts, while ComfyUI's launch post says realism character reference is still on the way there.

You can browse InVideo's Seedance 2.0 landing page, compare it with Mitte's pricing grid, and check Runway's spec sheet for the aspect ratio list. Freepik's product page already has Seedance 2.0 live for Business and Enterprise users, and ComfyUI's new rollout post adds first to last frame generation to the growing pile of host-specific variations.

InVideo's April 17 window

InVideo is pushing the cleanest short-term hook: unlimited Seedance 2.0 access for paid users until April 17, according to CharaspowerAI's post. The official InVideo model page says the model generates cinematic HD clips up to 15 seconds long and supports text, image, video, and audio inputs.

InVideo's own overview post frames the model around multi-shot consistency, reference-guided motion, and role-based asset tagging. The same post says Seedance 2.0 supports 4 to 15 second clips, up to 1080p, and six aspect ratios, including 21:9.

Prompting for motion, not just style

The most useful evidence in the tweet set is not the launch copy, it is the prompt structure. CharaspowerAI's thread roundup breaks 10 examples into timed beats, camera instructions, and a style block, which is basically a shot list disguised as a prompt pack.

Across those examples, the reusable pattern is consistent:

  1. Subject and setting in one sentence.
  2. A second by second action timeline, usually 0 to 15 seconds.
  3. Explicit camera moves, like push-in, orbit, whip pan, or aerial dive.
  4. A style line that locks genre, VFX density, and realism constraints.

That matches how InVideo's overview describes the model's strength: combining multimodal references with tighter motion and scene control. It also explains why so many early clips feel more storyboarded than prompted.

Mitte turns Seedance into a credit play

Mitte's announcement is less about exclusivity and more about price positioning. Anima Labs' post says Seedance 2 landed on Mitte with credits at half price through April 20, and the linked Mitte homepage calls the model available on all paid plans.

Mitte's pricing page adds the important detail: free users get no Seedance 2 video generations, Basic starts at $10 per month billed annually, and the Creative tier estimates roughly 297 Seedance 2 videos per month. For creators comparing hosts, that is a more concrete purchasing model than the usual waitlist language.

The platform differences are already visible

The community is starting to sort Seedance 2 hosts by workflow, not by brand. Artedeingenio highlighted image-to-video from an older stylized still with no extra prompt, while CharaspowerAI framed Runway's unlimited plan as ideal for repeated FPV experiments.

The format differences are even more specific:

  • ai_artworkgen said Freepik allows 21:9.
  • Runway's help article says Seedance 2.0 on Runway is available on Standard and higher plans, runs 5 to 15 seconds, and supports 21:9, 16:9, 4:3, 1:1, 3:4, and 9:16.
  • InVideo's overview lists the same six aspect ratios, including 21:9, with up to 1080p output.
  • Freepik's Seedance page says the model is live for Business and Enterprise users, with individual access still waiting in line.

One community claim is still squishier. ozansihay said realistic face restrictions appear to have lifted on many platforms, but the strongest official signal cuts the other way: ComfyUI's launch post says realism character reference is still coming soon there.

ComfyUI adds first and last frame control

The widest rollout news on April 13 was not limited to hosted editors. the ComfyUI repost pointed to Seedance 2.0 going live in ComfyUI for everyone, and the official ComfyUI announcement lists three modes at launch: text to video, reference to video, and first to last frame to video.

That gives Seedance 2.0 three distinct access lanes on the same day:

  • InVideo is using a temporary unlimited window for paid users.
  • Mitte is using a paid-plan bundle plus a time-boxed credit discount.
  • ComfyUI is emphasizing workflow control, especially first and last frame generation.
  • Freepik is pitching a higher-tier rollout first, with individual users on a waitlist, and even scheduled a Seedance 2.0 webinar.

For one model, that is already a surprisingly fragmented market map.

🧾 More sources

TL;DR3 tweets
Top-line facts on InVideo's limited unlimited window, Mitte's pricing move, creator behavior, and early platform differences.
The platform differences are already visible3 tweets
Creator examples and community observations on aspect ratios, experimentation, and face behavior across hosts.