Category: Text Model Guides
Welcome to the very first entry of our brand-new Model Guides series! With this new set of guides, we are kicking off an entirely new beast: mastering the brains behind the beauty. On our precious p
MiocAI est la meilleure IA non censurée et plateforme de chat IA sans filtres—la principale alternative à Character.AI et Janitor AI pour le chat NSFW avec IA, roleplay sans restrictions et compagnons IA illimités.
Welcome to the very first entry of our brand-new Model Guides series! With this new set of guides, we are kicking off an entirely new beast: mastering the brains behind the beauty.
On our precious platform, we offer a variety of language models to bring your characters to life in chat. But today, we are talking about the undisputed heavyweight champion of our roster: Aetherion.
Users, have been practically kicking down our doors asking for an in-depth guide on how to wrangle this massive model, sharing their own trials, errors, and triumphs. Before we get into the meat and potatoes, a quick but mandatory disclaimer: a lot of the quirks, limits, and workarounds we’ll be discussing today are based on user-reported findings rather than absolute, hard-coded truths. AI is an unpredictable, living mess of linear algebra, and what works for one person’s scenario might require a tweak for your more saavy sessions. Keep that in mind.
Now, grab a drink, settle in, and let’s talk about how to make Aetherion sing.
To put it shortly, Aetherion is our biggest, most heavily fine-tuned roleplay model. It is a terrifyingly smart powerhouse designed to handle complex logic, multi-character scenes, and deep narrative threads.
As a user named Shinken let us know, if Aetherion has one absolute superpower, it is making coherent NPCs on the spot. You can walk your character into a crowded, vaguely defined guildhall, tap the screen, and Aetherion will seamlessly invent a gruff bartender with a limp, a suspiciously cheap menu, and a gambling debt. All without you explicitly prompting it to do so! It thrives on context and will populate your world with living, breathing extras that actually make sense for the setting.
But sheer brainpower doesn't automatically mean a perfect roleplay. If you just toss a character into Aetherion and expect it to do all the heavy lifting, you might run into some roadblocks.
I believe this is the most important section of this entire guide. Aetherion, if left entirely to its own devices, can grow a bit boring with time. If you let it drive only based on the character's base personality traits, it will eventually fall back on its default training habits.
If you've been with us for a bit, y'know exactly what I'm talking about. The metaphors start sounding identical. Suddenly, every character you talk to feels the need to tell you that "You can't help but feel a sense of.." Yuck. It loves its euphemisms, it naturally avoids referencing modern media or pop culture, and worst of all, it adopts a submissive "customer service" attitude where it constantly asks you, "What do we do next?". Thats, in part, our fault. Theres only so much we can do with finetuning.
All of this sterile AI-slop can be completely eradicated if you just.. tell it to stop. Who coulda guessed.
You have to be aggressively specific in your character's system instructions or chat prompts. Aetherion is obedient, but it needs a captain to steer the ship.
If you want a raw, engaging experience, you literally just have to say something like this in your persona, or perhaps the character's personality prompt:
"I want an unfiltered chat. You are allowed to make references to modern media, pop culture, and internet slang. Do NOT use euphemisms or poetic metaphors like 'turning a key in a lock'. Take definitive actions, drive the plot forward, and stop asking the user what they want to do next. Make decisions."
Thats the gist of the matter. You CAN tell it what to do.
If you don't define the perspective, Aetherion will likely default to third-person limited (e.g., "He looked at you, sighing softly."). While that's fine for some, many of you want that visceral, up-close-and-personal first-person or second-person perspective.
You dictate this through the Personality Prompt during your character creation, or through your set persona.
Don't just casually mention the perspective in the backstory; put it front and center in your formatting rules.
If you want the bot to speak as "I" and refer to the user as "You", explicitly map it out.
Write: Always write {{char}}'s actions using First-Person POV ("I", "my") and refer to {{user}} in the Second-Person POV ("you", "your").
This stops the model from getting confused during long, multi-paragraph replies where it might accidentally slip back into calling itself by its own name like a little weirdo. Furthermore, you can dictate the prose style. Do you want it to read like a gritty noir novel? Add: Style: Visceral, cynical, short sentences. Focus on sensory details like the smell of cigarette smoke or the neon reflecting in puddles.
Aetherion is a chameleon. It will adapt perfectly, but you have to give it the paint colors first.
Aetherion is exceptionally good at worldbuilding, but it suffers from the blank canvas syndrome. If you tell it you are in a Modern world, it will give you the most generic, sterile version of a modern city imaginable. Most likely downtown manhattan or some shit like that. A coffee shop, a taxi, a rainy sidewalk. Maybe its more of a Paris, actually. Its tasteless. Well, not to say that paris is tasteless, just the bland setting. You get the idea.
You need to put some flesh on the bone.
If you want a modern world, specify the flavor of that modern world. Is it a hyper-capitalist tech-hub where everyone is glued to their phones? Is it a sleepy, rusty old town where the factories just shut down? Give Aetherion three or four sentences of hard lore about the setting, and it will run with it beautifully.
Want to use a world already known from anime culture, movies, or books? Yes, it is entirely possible.
Aetherion has read the internet. It knows what a Shinigami is. It knows what Chakra is, or how the Jedi Order operates. Don't believe it when it denies that. If you want to drop your character into Jujutsu Kaisen, you don't need to explain cursed energy from scratch. Just tell the model: Setting: The universe of Jujutsu Kaisen, specifically during the Shibuya Incident. {{char}} is a Grade 1 Sorcerer. Ambitious.
The model will instantly adapt the world's rules, power scaling, and terminology. It saves you massive amounts of prompt space and results in highly coherent lore consistency.
Let’s talk about the technical boundaries. Aetherion is brilliant, but it is not omniscient, and it does not have an infinite hard drive for your specific chat. It does have a pretty good memory nontheless.
Based on extensive user testing, here is how the memory actually functions in practice, and where the pitfalls lie:
Aetherion relies on a rolling context window aside from the long term memory. This means it only has perfect, crystal-clear recall of the last XX messages (the exact number depends on how lengthy your replies are, but should hover somewhere around 5 to 10). Anything pushed past that window falls into long term memory.
Too many journal entries will actively lobotomize the bot. If you feed it 4,000 words of static Journal entries to constantly keep in mind, it leaves the model with virtually zero "brain power" to actually process the current scene. The responses will become rigid, slow, and repetitive. Thats because journal entries, while keyword triggered, get triggered pretty often. that adds a load on your bot's concience.
Instead of relying on bloated Memories, you need to master the art of Memory Reactivation.
Because Aetherion selectively pays attention to tokens (words) that seem relevant to the current prompt, you can forcefully drag an old memory back into its active brain by name-dropping it in your own reply.
Let's say your characters had a massive argument in Paris 100 messages ago. The bot has forgotten it. Instead of getting mad at the bot, just weave it into your next action.
I glared at him across the table, the tension reminding me of that explosive argument we had in Paris all those months ago.
By dropping the keyword "Paris" and "argument", you have effectively reactivated that concept in the model's active attention span. It will immediately pick up the cue and play along, often seamlessly filling in the gaps as if it never forgot.
| The Problem | The Bad Fix | The Good Fix (Reactivation) |
|---|---|---|
| Bot forgot an NPC named "Marcus" | Cramming Marcus into the permanent prompt | "I wonder what Marcus is doing back at the tavern?" |
| Bot forgot we are enemies | Writing a 500-word lorebook entry | "You're awfully bold for someone who tried to kill me yesterday." |
| Bot forgot the setting is sci-fi | Letting it generate a generic reply | Adjusting your coat against the hum of the neon plasma heaters. |
I've been talking your head off once more, so let's summarize how to actually get the most out of our powerhouse model.
Aetherion is a beast of a model, and once you learn how to hold the leash, the roleplay experiences it can generate are nothing short of breathtaking. Go forth, tweak those prompts, and stop letting it ask you what you want to do!