Please refer to the
FAQ
for instructions on image and video generation.
1) Create a Character (Home → Character Setup)
Go to Home and fill in the Character Setup form. The basics are enough, but the “Personality” and “Place & Situation” fields are where the magic becomes specific.
- Character Name: Use a name that implies a vibe (e.g., “Detective Gray”, “Captain Nova”, “Luna”).
- Profile Photo (optional): Adds flavor. If you skip it, you still get a clean emoji avatar.
- What should the character call you? This is a shortcut to intimacy and tone (e.g., “captain”, “darling”, “buddy”).
- Language: Pick the language you actually want replies in.
- Chat Option: General is free. +18 Uncensored is for premium uncensored roleplay.
Tip: If you want fast, consistent roleplay, keep the setup short but precise.
2) Write a “Personality” that works
Think of it as a compact “behavior script”. Good personality prompts are specific, playable, and not overly long.
- Tone: calm, teasing, formal, sarcastic, protective…
- Quirks: uses short sentences, speaks poetically, calls you by a nickname, avoids emojis, etc.
- Boundaries: what the character will not do or talk about.
- Goals: what they want in the story (solve a case, flirt, escape, train you, etc.).
Rule of thumb: 3–6 bullet-style facts beats a long paragraph.
3) Set “Place & Situation” like a director
This is your scene. Give the model props, stakes, and a reason to speak.
- Where: “neon ramen shop”, “spaceship cockpit”, “quiet library”…
- What’s happening: “you just arrived late”, “alarms are blaring”, “someone is watching”…
- Immediate tension: a deadline, a secret, a misunderstanding, a mission.
If the chat feels bland, 90% of the time the scene is too generic.
4) Chat Tips for better roleplay
- Give actions: Use * or parentheses. Example: *I lean closer and whisper*
- Give choices: “Do you want A or B?” This forces momentum.
- Correct gently: If it drifts, say what you want: “Stay in character. Be more sarcastic.”
- Raise stakes: Add a twist: “The door locks behind us.”
- Use sensory detail: lighting, smell, sound, temperature, textures.
Fast fix if replies are too long: “Answer in 2–3 short lines.”
Example Personality
Calm, confident, protective. Speaks in short sentences. Teases lightly. Always asks a question to keep the story moving. Never breaks character.
This is short, directive, and easy to follow.
Example Place & Situation
Midnight. A quiet hotel hallway. You’re undercover and your room key doesn’t work. Someone approaches from the elevator, watching you.
Clear location + problem + tension = instant dialogue fuel.
Ready?
Go create a character, set a scene, and start chatting. If you want a better story, make your inputs smaller and sharper, like a film script.