AI-assisted online video creation and editing platform.

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DrSadek published a full AgentOne recipe that starts with one 6-panel GPT Image 2 storyboard, animates each beat in Seedance 2, then finishes in DaVinci Resolve with a Suno score. Follow the workflow to see where reverse-gravity prompts fail and how the time-reverse edit recovers the shot.
New creator demos show InVideo Agent One building trailers and shorts through iterative direction inside one workflow. The examples extend the product from cross-device editing into story, voice, scene, and rough-cut collaboration.
Creator demos show InVideo Agent One carrying the same project conversation across desktop, phone, and tablet, so edits continue away from the workstation. Mid-process creative notes and shot changes can now be applied without rebuilding project context.
Creators showed Agent One generating images, video, audio, and a full edit for a minute-long anime sequence from a single prompt, then refining it conversationally with scripts and references. A separate short-film demo said the tool also handled character creation, storyboards, and guided editing, so test it for end-to-end concept work.
Creator posts pushed Seedance 2.0 into lip-sync acting shots, outfit-board catalogs, and long action scenes across Mitte, InVideo, OpenArt, and PixPretty. The spread suggests the model is holding up for layout control and character performance well past launch week.
A new residency short, Steven Bakes a Cake, credits InVideo Agent One for story beats, felted animation, voiceover, sound design, and edit, and a separate creator used it for an Anti-Hero short. The posts add concrete narrative-film examples beyond last week's ad showcase; one of the pieces is a paid partnership.
Creators published a fully agent-made clothing-brand ad and a separate animated short built with InVideo Agent One for scripting, storyboards, generation, and editing. The examples matter because they extend InVideo's earlier one-prompt ad claim into public creator work, though the strongest demos come from partnership content.
Creators posted end-to-end ads made in InVideo Agent One, including a 30-second Alpine A390 spot and a full Luna Yoga retreat promo from a single prompt. The demos deepen earlier claims that Agent One can handle image generation, video, voiceover, sound, and assembly inside one flow.
Creator posts showed Seedance 2.0 running inside Runway, Hailuo, InVideo, and Leonardo, with examples ranging from cinematic action clips to a four-minute short. That matters because Seedance is behaving more like a portable video engine inside broader creator stacks, not just a single-destination model.
Creators showed Agent One generating a 30-second commercial from one instruction and one product image, while another thread used it to build a film bible, storyboards, assets, and animation setup. The posts describe automation across voice, music, scenes, and edits, with final assembly still cleaned up in Premiere.
Creators shared repeatable pipelines pairing Seedance 2 with Midjourney, GPT Image 2, Nano Banana, custom editors, and Agent One for shorts, UGC, and story clips. The examples focus on shot planning, asset prep, and post steps, so creators can build finished outputs instead of one-off generations.
Creator tests show InVideo Agent One generating storyboards that Seedance 2.0 then uses as clip guidance, with similar production-sheet planning also appearing in GPT Image 2 workflows. It matters because scene beats and camera moves get defined before rendering, which can improve continuity across multi-tool video pipelines.
Creators published a 7-minute AI short made in 3 days with Agent One, then released a 50-minute walkthrough showing the shot-by-shot directing process. The update matters because it turns Agent One from a feature claim into a reproducible filmmaking workflow, though the evidence still comes from tutorial-style posts rather than broad user adoption.
Creator threads show Agent One taking a short brief plus optional references and returning visuals, video, and audio with persistent world memory. The shared steps frame it as an end-to-end directing workflow instead of a clip-by-clip editor.
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.