This reminds me I saw a post today with some tips on what makes a prompt that produces consistent results. The author wrote: I've been testing Suno for a month, trying to understand what makes a good prompt vs a bad one. What I learned: 1. BPM is crucial - Generic prompts give random tempos. Specifying "75 BPM" gets you usable results. 2. Ambiance keywords matter - Adding "vinyl crackle" or "sounds of studio chatter" adds depth that "lo-fi dark wave deep house new new wave" alone doesn't capture. 3. "No vocals" is your friend - Unless you want lyrics, always include this. Saves 80% of regenerations. 4. Genre stacking - "Lo-fi boom beat deep house with R&B touches" > just "lo-fi" 5. Custom Mode is mandatory - Simple Mode is a lottery. The author's genre seems to be very specific but I think some of the tips would apply to everyone. Personally, my favorite thing to do is throw very strange words into the Styles, until I get something very unique and unexpected. This is what I'm noodling with tonight and having fun: ``` Create a minimal spacious cinematic unease, sparse distant bristol beats. mood and melody is melancholic, resolved only by pained soulful hypnotic soulful reeds, vinyl crackles, mournful, acoustic ,analog Eastern folk instruments, Experimental Nostalgic Vocal Sample, Trippy Collage Children's Requiem Mass, Acoustic Minimalism, Warm Rich Blanket, Music from an old worn out repaired cassette lost in the woods ages ago, Forgotten Sound Clip Art, Found Sound Tapestry, Gentle Plunderphonics, Burnt Improvised Soulful Reeds, Unfounded Grunts, Playful Swampy Spirit Gutterals, Found Folk, Collage cut ripped samples and tossed into the mix absent corpus mentis ```