Studio
Create, refine, import, and share characters in anime.gf Studio.
Studio is where an idea turns into a character people can actually talk to. If chatting is the front door of anime.gf, Studio is the place where you shape the voice, setup, and shareability behind the experience.
A good first version is usually smaller than you think
You do not need to fill every field to make a character feel alive. A clear concept, a strong greeting, and a few deliberate choices are usually enough to get started.
What You Can Do in Studio
Studio already supports:
- Creating a character from scratch.
- Editing an existing character.
- Uploading and cropping avatar and banner art.
- Writing greetings, lore, and message examples.
- Visibility control for public, unlisted, and private characters.
- Importing Tavern-style characters.
- Importing chat history onto an existing character.
How Characters Work
Learn the practical mental model behind greetings, personas, chat history, and steering.
Creating a Character
Build a strong first version by starting with the fields that matter most.
Publishing & Sharing
Choose the right visibility, understand sharing, and know what gets harder to change later.
Importing Characters & Chats
Bring over character cards and old conversations when you already have work elsewhere.
Studio Overview
Open the full Studio map first, then jump into smaller creator guides while you edit.
A Good Way to Approach Your First Character
- Start with avatar, title, name, description, and greeting.
- Add lore only after the core voice is clear.
- Add message examples when you need a specific response pattern.
- Choose the right visibility before you share anything.
- Revisit tags before the final save or update.
What Makes a Character Feel Finished
A character is usually ready when:
- The greeting already sounds like the intended experience.
- The description is specific without turning into a wall of text.
- The lore supports the scenario instead of fighting it.
- The message examples prove the style instead of restating it.
If you want exact field behavior while you write, keep Studio Overview open in another tab.