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Topview integrates Seedance 2.0 into Agent V2 with storyboard timelines and 365-day unlimited access

Topview added Seedance 2.0 to Agent V2, pairing multi-scene generation with a storyboard timeline and Business Annual access billed as 365 days of unlimited generations. That moves longform video workflows toward editable sequences instead of stitched clips.

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Topview integrates Seedance 2.0 into Agent V2 with storyboard timelines and 365-day unlimited access
Topview integrates Seedance 2.0 into Agent V2 with storyboard timelines and 365-day unlimited access

TL;DR

  • Topview says Seedance 2.0 is now integrated into Agent V2, shifting the pitch from single-shot generation to a longer-form pipeline with multi-scene output and timeline editing launch thread.
  • In the same rollout, Topview's storyboard demo frames the product around storyboards that break a rough idea into editable scenes, then let users rearrange shots and refine the narrative on one timeline.
  • Creator demos suggest the integration is not just marketing language: Underwood Xie’s test shows Seedance 2.0 being used for a fast-action skateboard sequence built from a detailed first-frame prompt and environmental sound direction.
  • Access is being sold aggressively alongside the launch, with both Topview promoters and creator posts describing Business Annual as 365 days of “unlimited” Seedance 2.0 use access post creator thread.

What shipped

Topview's launch posts describe Agent V2 x Seedance 2.0 as a combined workflow: prompt in, multi-scene generation out, with no need to stitch separate 5-15 second clips by hand. In Topview's workflow post, the company positions that as the main change, saying Agent V2 “blows past” short-clip limits through multi-scene generation plus built-in timeline editing.

The more creator-relevant piece is the storyboard layer. Topview's storyboard demo says a raw idea is converted into a production blueprint, then scenes can be edited, reordered, and tightened on a unified timeline. A separate post adds that Seedance 2.0 is the visual engine underneath, while Agent V2 handles the sequencing and edit structure visuals post.

What the workflow looks like in practice

The clearest practical example comes from Underwood Xie, who says Topview gave him Seedance 2.0 access with support for combining multiple clips. His prompt is unusually specific: use one image as the first frame and style reference, keep the girl’s outfit palette and design consistent, follow her with a Steadicam perspective, exaggerate speed with heavy motion blur, choreograph body position changes through turns, and add fireworks plus a passing airplane in the distance full prompt. The result is a 15-second downhill sequence with sustained motion and coherent camera intent skateboard sequence.

A second creator thread expands the workflow claims beyond image-to-video. According to Artedeingenio’s post, Agent V2 supports image-to-video, text-to-video, and “Omnireference,” and is meant to move from idea to storyboard to final video inside one interface rather than across separate tools.

Access, limits, and the fine print

The commercial hook is as prominent as the product update. Topview posts say OpenClaw users can install a Topview skill for access, and that the Business Annual plan unlocks 365 days of unlimited Seedance 2.0 generation through Topview's Seedance page.

The wrinkle is that the linked product material is less absolute than the social posts. Topview's pricing page describes broader plan tiers, credits, concurrency caps, and model access across the platform, while the Seedance landing page summarized in evidence still mentions outputs up to 15 seconds and 720p for that page version product summary. The launch is real, but some of the “unlimited duration” and “unlimited use” language is still being communicated more clearly in posts than in the linked product details.

Further reading

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