SOUL 2 Vs. Nano Banana Pro 💥
Higgsfield ha lanzado su nuevo generador de imágenes SOUL 2 ⚡ Puedes subirle hasta 80 imágenes de referencia de tu personaje para mantener mejor la constancia 👀
Y para compararlo bien, lo he puesto a prueba junto a Nano Banana Pro que hasta el momento es mi generador de imágenes favorito 💕
La verdad es que hay algunos resultados de SOUL 2 que me han sorprendido bastante... No está nada mal, pero sigo prefiriendo Nano Banana para la mayoría de las ocasiones 😅
Os dejo algunas imágenes que he generado y espero leer vuestras opiniones en comentarios 💌 Y si quieres los prompts de todas las imágenes comenta "ARIA" y te los mando por mensaje!
How soy_aria_cruz Made This Snow Battle AI Portrait and How to Recreate It
This image is effective because it compares two models on a genuinely difficult scene. Snow, motion, glasses, facial tension, weapon direction, and identity continuity all have to survive at once. That makes the post more than a cool winter frame. It becomes a stress test, and viewers can feel that immediately.
The comparison format is doing most of the strategic work. A single dramatic image might get attention, but it does not teach much. Two matched winter-action outputs with clear labels invite people to inspect differences in realism, emotion, and environmental control. That makes the image strong both as content and as evidence.
Why This Format Performs
The hardest part of the prompt is controlled aggression. The woman has to look intense without losing her recognizable face. The glasses have to remain plausible under snowfall. The gun has to aim forward in a readable way. Snow has to feel active without hiding the subject. When all of that mostly holds together, the audience experiences the result as high competence.
The second reason it works is panel contrast. The left side is tighter and more claustrophobic. The right side is wider and more cinematic. That creates a useful comparison without changing the core prompt identity. Viewers can compare not just quality, but interpretation style. One output feels more intimate; the other feels more action-oriented.
Signal
Evidence (from this image)
Mechanism
Replication Action
High-difficulty weather realism
Snowflakes, snowbanks, cold haze, and hair accumulation all need to read correctly.
Winter scenes expose whether a model can layer atmosphere without destroying the subject.
Specify both falling snow and snow-covered foreground surfaces, not only a “snowy background.”
Identity under stress
The same glasses, ponytail, earrings, and facial structure survive in both panels.
Action prompts often cause identity drift, so consistency feels impressive here.
Lock personal markers early and repeat them explicitly in the prompt.
Readable confrontation
The weapon is aimed toward the viewer in both frames.
The direct line of action creates instant tension and scroll-stopping energy.
Keep the camera relationship clear so the subject appears engaged with the frame.
Explicit benchmark packaging
The panel labels make the model showdown impossible to miss.
Viewers know exactly what they are comparing and are more likely to comment with a winner.
Use obvious but compact lower-third version labels inside the image.
Best Use Cases and Transfers
This pattern is excellent for model-vs-model posts, realism stress tests, winter action prompt packs, and comparison carousels built around difficult environmental conditions. It also transfers well to rain scenes, desert dust scenes, low-light alley scenes, and underwater portraits, because the same principle applies: keep identity stable inside a difficult atmosphere.
Best for benchmark content: the audience can judge both style and technical survival in one frame.
Best for engagement hooks: side-by-side action scenes naturally invite “left or right?” comments.
Best for prompt education: it shows that weather control and identity control are linked.
Best for advanced creator demos: the subject remains personal even inside a more cinematic scenario.
It is less suited for soft lifestyle branding, product catalog work, or emotionally calm portrait series. The image depends on tension. That is its advantage, but it narrows the kind of story it can tell.
Not ideal for comfort-content feeds: the confrontational pose changes the emotional register.
Not ideal for minimalist aesthetics: snowfall and weapon detail create deliberate visual density.
Not ideal for family-safe generic branding: the tactical framing is too aggressive.
Three Transfer Recipes
Winter realism showdown. Keep: same subject twice, heavy snowfall, lower model labels. Change: pose distance, coat design, snow density. Slot template (EN): {same creator in two winter action panels} {snow-driven atmospheric stress test} {identity preserved with glasses and hairstyle} {clear benchmark labels}
Weather-pressure portrait test. Keep: identity lock and environmental difficulty. Change: snow into rain, dust, ash, or sea spray. Slot template (EN): {same portrait subject repeated twice} {hard atmosphere partially obscuring the frame} {recognizable face markers preserved} {A/B comparison graphic}
Cinematic-versus-clean interpretation pair. Keep: one prompt, two render styles. Change: framing tension and lens feel. Slot template (EN): {left panel tighter and denser} {right panel slightly wider and more dramatic} {same subject and core action} {visible version names}
Aesthetic Read
The left panel feels harsher because the composition is compressed. The face is closer, the foreground barrier is darker, and the snow reads as interference. The right panel feels more polished because the snowbank is brighter and the background blur gives the frame cinematic depth. That difference is useful. It gives the audience something immediate to compare beyond simple sharpness.
The glasses are one of the most important details in the entire image. Without them, the subject would become a generic winter-action heroine. With them, the image still belongs to the same recognizable creator identity that appears in her softer lifestyle and sports posts. That continuity is exactly what makes the benchmark persuasive.
Observed
Why it matters for recreation
Snowflakes visible against dark hair and the air
The storm reads as active instead of decorative.
Bright snowbank foreground in both panels
The cover position gives the scene immediate action logic.
Glasses and hoop earrings remain visible
Identity markers survive even in an aggressive scene.
Close-up left versus wider right framing
The comparison shows interpretation range without changing the core concept.
Compact lower logos and model names
The benchmark packaging stays readable without overpowering the image.
Prompt Technique Breakdown
To recreate this well, you need to define the benchmark shell, then the winter-action conditions, then the identity lock. If you skip the shell, you will get one normal image. If you skip the identity lock, the two versions will feel like different women. If you skip the weather instructions, the snow becomes generic wallpaper.
Prompt chunk
What it controls
Swap ideas (EN, 2-3 options)
two vertical winter action comparison panels with a dark teal border
The A/B structure and visual packaging
split-screen benchmark graphic; side-by-side model showdown; dual-panel action comparison
same young woman with clear glasses, hoop earrings, high ponytail
Identity continuity under environmental stress
same creator repeated twice; stable facial markers; matching subject across both outputs
aiming a long black rifle from behind a snowbank with gritted teeth
heavy falling snow and cold blurred forest background
Weather realism and cinematic atmosphere
windblown snowfall; blue-gray storm environment; active winter haze
left panel tighter, right panel slightly wider
Meaningful variation while preserving comparability
compressed close-up versus broader portrait; intimate versus cinematic framing; matched subject, different lens feel
bottom labels for Higgsfield SOUL 2 and NANO-BANANA PRO
Immediate benchmark readability
lower version tags; compact model name labels; platform logos near the bottom edge
Remix Steps
Lock the side-by-side frame first. Then stabilize the woman’s identity markers. After that, push on the snow and cover logic. The weapon and expression should come after the environment is believable, because the atmosphere is what makes the scene difficult in the first place.
Run 1: establish the split-screen benchmark composition with both subjects aligned and clearly repeated.
Run 2: lock glasses, ponytail, earrings, and facial proportions so the same person appears in both panels.
Run 3: correct the snowbanks, falling flakes, and cold background until the winter scene feels physically convincing.
Run 4: refine the aiming pose, facial tension, and lower labels to make the showdown feel intentional and readable.
If the scene becomes chaotic, simplify the background before simplifying the snow or the subject. The storm and the identity are the point. The background trees only need to support those two elements.