Models in AI Chatbots: What They Are and How to Create Original Characters and Visuals

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Adult, ai porn chatbot and apps aren’t a single “universal bot.” They’re more like a cast of improv actors you can direct: you set the personality, boundaries, tone, and pacing, and the scene adapts to you. Important note: everything below is about creating original characters and visuals — not copying the likeness of real people or celebrities.

Common character types (loose categories)

  • Romantic Flirt: Warm, gentle, more hints than directness.
  • Witty Conversationalist: Jokes, light sarcasm, intellectual play.
  • Caring Partner: Supportive, empathetic, slow pace, frequent check-ins.
  • Confident Leader: Clear rules, negotiated boundaries, careful escalation.
  • Story-Driven: Builds mini-plots and rotates scenes (café, concert, weekend trip).
  • Long-Distance Vibe: Daily check-ins, plans, “good morning”/“good night” texts.
  • After-Stress Comfort: Soft tone, validation, gentle redirection.

You can blend roles: “romantic + witty,” “confident + caring,” etc. The balance is yours.

How to craft your own character (no borrowed likeness)

  1. Short brief (2–3 sentences).
    Example: “You’re warm, witty, and patient. Flirt by implication, not explicit words. Always ask before changing the pace.”
  2. Boundaries and communication style.
    Spell out what’s in and out (language, topics, speed). This prevents awkward turns and improves quality.
  3. Pacing and check-ins.
    Add a rule like: “If the tone shifts, ask first: ‘Is this okay?’”
  4. Artifacts and anchors.
    Create inside jokes, favorite places/music. These add a lived-in feel and continuity.
  5. Scene cards.
    Keep a few short “settings”: “after a concert,” “morning coffee,” “evening walk.” Rotating scenes reduces repetition.

Creating images for original characters (ethical approach)

Goal: a unique visual identity without copying real people.

1) Describe the atmosphere, not a specific face.

  • Vibes: “’60s restrained elegance,” “indie aesthetic,” “minimalist,” “soft light.”
  • Mood: calm, spark of mischief, quiet intrigue.
  • Setting: city lights through a window, vintage café, bookstore aisle.

2) Break it into attributes.

  • Hair: length, texture, hue (“copper with golden undertones”).
  • Features: brow shape, lip silhouette, gaze (“soft, attentive”).
  • Wardrobe: “structured top + wide-leg trousers,” “clean normcore.”
  • Color & light: warm diffused; evening rim light; natural morning light.

3) Pick an art style (separate from personality).
Illustration, 3D render, anime stylization, realistic portrait, cinematic still. Style shapes the feel but must not reference real people.

4) What to exclude.

  • Celebrity names, exact descriptions, “looks like [name].”
  • Shots duplicating famous photo sessions or film stills with recognizable faces.
  • Obvious brand/IP elements without permission.

5) “Negative prompts” (what you don’t want).
Examples: “no resemblance to real individuals,” “no logos,” “no explicit references to known personalities.”

6) Iterate cleanly.
Save good versions and tweak one parameter at a time: lighting, pose, expression, background.

Defining behavior and voice without a real-world template

  • Three-word compass: “warm — witty — attentive.”
  • Communication rules: “imply rather than state,” “ask before shifting tone.”
  • Tempo: “slow start, everyday details first, avoid clichés.”
  • Comfort triggers: “don’t interrupt long replies,” “support jokes from the user.”
  • Banned moves: canned pickup lines, abrupt escalations, excessive syrupy language.

Copy-ready brief template

“You’re an attentive, witty conversationalist with a soft sense of humor. Use implication rather than explicit wording. Start with light flirting and everyday details (coffee, music, plans). Always check pacing (‘Is this okay?’), respect boundaries, and don’t speed up unless asked. Remember our shared jokes and bring them back later.”

Keeping conversations lively

  • Change the scene, not only the topic. Bookshop, tram ride, park after rain, late tea in the kitchen.
  • Add neutral sensory details: rain sound, citrus aroma, the crunch of a pastry.
  • Leave “breadcrumbs” for next time: “Tomorrow: café banter—keep it gentle.”

Why not celebrities or “looks like…”

This is about ethics and quality:

  • It violates the consent and boundaries of real people.
  • It narrows your creativity by locking you into someone else’s face.
  • It risks moderation issues and platform bans.

Original characters are more resilient: you can freely adjust style, age vibe, setting, wardrobe—without “recognizability” risks.

Quick examples (no references to real people)

  • “Vintage–Indie Barista”: warm short bob; golden–chestnut hair; soft gaze; warm diffused light; chunky-knit sweater; cozy café background. Personality: empathetic humor, slow pace, gentle teasing.
  • “Urban Minimalist”: sleek ponytail; clean clothing lines; cool daylight; glass-and-concrete backdrop. Personality: composed, ironic, boundary-aware.
  • “Cinematic Dream”: half-shadows, backlight, light film grain, neutral wardrobe. Personality: romantic, image-rich language, “cinematic” metaphors.

Pre-publish/use checklist

  • No indicators of a real person’s identity or name.
  • No recognizable brands/logos/IP.
  • Boundaries and pacing rules are specified.
  • Scenes and vibes are yours, not copied frames.
  • Visuals comply with platform rules and local laws.
Caroline Blake

Caroline Blake is a News Writer at Social Star Age from Chicago, Illinois. Joining in 2024, she passionately covers trending news and topics. With a Bachelor's degree in English, focusing on Media, Rhetoric, and Cultural Studies from the University of Illinois at Chicago, she is dedicated to highlighting key developments and shifts in the world of media and culture.

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