Same video prompt, different strengths in Kling and Seedance

and gave different kinds of results from the same video prompt. The test scene was a quiet late-night moment outside a convenience store, with a young woman in an oversized varsity jacket eating a rice snack on a plastic stool.

The target style was an early-2000s handheld camera look, with small shakes, warm streetlight glow, light grain, vending machine noise, cicadas, and no music. One model kept the character and framing steadier, so the result felt cleaner and more controlled.

The other model leaned into a rougher handheld feel, which made the scene look more natural and less polished. The useful lesson is to choose the model based on the shot you want, not to treat one model as the single best choice for every video.

Key points

  • and were tested with the same video prompt.
  • The scene aimed for a quiet, realistic late-night convenience store mood.
  • One model was stronger for clean framing and steady character control.
  • The other model was stronger for rough, handheld, documentary-style realism.
  • The main is to match the to the kind of shot you need.
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