So you wanna make an AI character? Cool. Here’s how to make yours actually interesting.
1. Names & Basics
- Keep names short—under 50 characters. The AI likes them better, and honestly, so will you.
- Pro move: If your character’s from a show/game, slap the source in there (e.g., "Naruto’s Sasuke"). Helps the AI (and clueless users) recognize them.
2. Personality: Less Essay, More Presentation
Sure, you could write a novel about your character’s tragic backstory. Or you could just… not.
- Show, don’t tell: Instead of "shy", make them say stuff like "Uh… can we talk later? Maybe?"
- Flaws = good: Perfect characters are boring. Make them a "confident jerk who secretly hates themselves" or something.
- Use the lightning button if you’re lazy, but don’t expect magic—it mostly works for famous characters.
3. Pictures: Make Them Look Like a Person (Or Don’t)
We’ve got two styles:
- Anime (default, because weebs)
- Realistic (for when you forget what the uncanny valley is)
How to Not Get a Random Blob
Short prompts work: "Orange hair, red eyes, blue dress" > "Exquisitely curled tangerine locks with cerulean garment" (see below).
- Long prompt attempt:
- Short prompt attempt:
- Famous characters? Easy mode: Just type "Hatsune Miku, Vocaloid" and boom:
Pro tip: Put the important stuff first ("cyborg arm" before "wears socks").
4. Voice: Make Them Scream (Optional)
- Record 10-30 seconds of them talking (or yelling, we don’t judge).
- Add a transcript—yes, even the awkward laugh parts.
- CAPS LOCK = EMOTION: "HUH? WHAT DID YOU JUST SAY?!" sounds way better than "huh, what did you just say?"
Warning: Don’t clone voices illegally. We will find you.
Important Stuff
- NSFW? Keep it private, or your character gets terminated along with your account.
- Test images first—unless you want your vampire to look like an anemic child.
Now go make something cool.