Seko Infinite Canvas: Create Epic Wuxia Films at 80% Lower Cost with AI Agent Workflow

AI video generation tools have exploded in capability, but the price tag often stings. Seedance 2.0, for instance, delivers stunning results but consumes 12 credits per second for 720p and 40 credits per second for 1080p. A one-minute video at high resolution can easily drain hundreds of credits, with users frequently complaining about "downgraded" outputs that force expensive retakes. This barrier keeps many creators from exploring their cinematic dreams—especially those with limited budgets or technical skills.

Enter Seko, a platform that slashes those costs by up to 80%. 720p video drops to 6 credits per second (a 50% reduction), while 1080p falls to just 8 credits per second (an 80% savings). More importantly, Seko introduces an Agent-driven workflow that automates the entire production pipeline: it generates plots, characters, scenes, camera angles, dialogue, and even background music from a single prompt. Users no longer need to manually craft prompts or piece together fragmented clips. They simply provide a rough story outline, and the Agent handles the rest.

The core innovation is the "Infinite Canvas"—a single, expandable workspace where all assets—characters, backgrounds, storyboards, and generated videos—are organized visually. Every storyboard frame contains detailed breakdowns of camera movements, scene descriptions, and voice-over scripts. If a specific shot doesn’t meet expectations, users can modify the description and regenerate only that clip without rebuilding everything. This granular control, combined with the cost reduction, makes professional-grade video creation accessible to hobbyists and small teams.

The real magic lies in the workflow automation: instead of spending hours fine-tuning prompts, creators focus on storytelling. Seko’s Agent interprets the user’s intent and proposes a complete narrative structure. For example, a simple idea like "a male and female warrior compete for the top spot in a martial arts arena" triggers an automatic generation of character designs, battle choreography, and dramatic dialogue. Users can choose from preset character libraries or have the AI create unique avatars. The multi-episode mode allows for serialized content, ensuring narrative consistency across scenes—something previously requiring manual editing and deep domain knowledge.

Beyond the core functionality, the Infinite Canvas includes practical tools like 720° panoramic scene generation and a "Nine-Grid" tool for inspiration, storyboarding, and action choreography. These features add polish without complexity. Contextually, Seko fills a gap between expensive, resource-hungry tools like Runway and Pika (which often require premium subscriptions for similar quality) and free, limited generators. While those platforms demand significant manual tuning, Seko’s Agent approach lowers the entry bar dramatically.

The biggest shift isn’t just cost—it’s the democratization of visual storytelling. Independent creators, educators, and small studios can now produce cinematic narratives once reserved for big budgets. However, critics argue that heavy automation might homogenize creative output, reducing the organic, human touch in storytelling. Seko addresses this by allowing users to override Agent decisions and tweak every element, preserving artistic control.

In practice, creating a 90-second Wuxia film with Seko takes about 10 minutes from prompt to final export. The conversational interface lets users iterate on the plot and visuals through simple text commands, making the process feel like a collaborative writing session rather than a technical chore. The future of content creation lies not in better hardware, but in smarter workflows that amplify human creativity.

If you’ve ever dreamed of making your own epic but felt stopped by the cost or complexity, Seko’s Infinite Canvas offers a practical bridge. Start with a one-sentence idea, let the Agent build the world, and refine only where your vision demands. The tool won’t replace a master director’s artistry, but it gives anyone with a story a chance to see it come alive—without breaking the bank.