Decide where the song should rise
Energy should have a destination. Before adding words like dynamic, euphoric, explosive, or massive, decide which section is meant to carry the release.
If every line in the prompt asks for maximum lift, Suno has less room to build tension. Keep the verse or first chorus more controlled so the later payoff feels deliberate.
Prompt examples
Final-chorus payoff prompt
Euphoric electronic pop, syncopated drums, pulsating bass, restrained verse, rising pre-chorus tension, wide final chorus, polished club-scale mix
The prompt makes the final chorus the destination instead of asking every section to peak at once.
Use rhythm and section language together
Energy is not only about loudness. Syncopated, driving, clipped, pulsating, and dynamic all change how the motion feels before the chorus arrives.
Combine rhythm words with section instructions such as build-up, drop, chorus lift, or final chorus to make the arc more controllable.
Keep release sections earned
A big release works better when something smaller came before it. Try a restrained verse, a narrower pre-chorus, or a lighter drum pattern before the main lift.
When the song still feels flat, change one energy layer at a time. Test the groove, then the structure, then the texture, instead of rewriting the whole prompt.