I've retired from botmaking and using chatbots altogether.
The point has honestly come and gone; roleplaying with real people took the place c.ai and other sites used to fill when it came to my creativity. However, I continued to use them for comfort reasons and quick-and-easy dopamine hits. LLM roleplaying is kind of like the fast food of writing, I think.
Additionally, the quality of these sites in general has plummeted in the past... year? As a creator I've had much less incentive to put work into bots that all lean on the same cliches, ignoring the writing style I design them to have.
Finally, I feel confident enough in my other creations to drop this without feeling like I won't have anything else to offer. As dramatic as that sounds. ^^;;
It's for these reasons that I'm officially putting it aside. I'm sorry to anyone I took a request from or who were looking forward to more bots. I could have made this post months ago.
I'm not taking anything down and if you still enjoy these platforms that's all good by me, it's just not my cup of tea anymore.
C.ai led to me making a tumblr account and meeting some people I consider my best friends. It brought me into creative communities that inspired me to write more and learn to draw. It was a very good starting domino, but human art will always take the cake.
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
✓ Live Streaming✓ Interactive Chat✓ Private Shows✓ HD Quality
Anya is LIVE right now
FREE
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
a brief guide to example messages- the best way I've found to write bots
This is just copy-pasted from my guide bot, since it seems definitions are no longer accessible on c.ai. Fun fact, I wrote this guide mid all-nighter whilst avoiding schoolwork last year.
I'll meet ya under the cut.
Let's get into it!
∘₊✧───────────────────────────────────────✧₊∘
A lot of creators are unfortunately unaware of this, but bots can only read the first 3,200 characters in the definition, as confirmed by the devs:
(source)
Because of htis, is vital to be as efficient as possible with what you put in there. The best method for keeping a character in character is via example messages. If you go to any of my narrative heavy bots, edit their greeting to be blank, and then say anything to it, you will still receive a reply that uses consistent formatting and references to the character's traits. This is something that is most easily achieved with example dialog.
My characters are built primarily from example messages, so that's what I'll be talking about here. This doesn't cover everything that goes into making a character, but it's the most important part. Why?
*✧・゚: *✧・゚:─ 𝑺𝒉𝒐𝒘, 𝒅𝒐𝒏'𝒕 𝒕𝒆𝒍𝒍.
Much like the rule in writing that it's better to show an audience what's going on, rather than tell them, AI much prefers to be shown how to act rather than told in the way of templates. Things like "Focus on: "Environment" + "Appearance" + "Tone of voice"" Don't work. If you want your particular style to come across, example messages are the only way to achieve that. Otherwise, it defaults. And the narration from blank bots is less than desirable, usually leading to issues like looping and "Can I ask you a question?".
✮ Example messages also add to a word pool that the bot will draw from. If you mention blonde hair in passing, the AI will know to consistently apply blonde hair to the character.
Anyway, let's get into the nitty gritty.
======-BUILDING EXAMPLE MESSAGES-========
Gather traits. I recommend, before diving into a character definition, making a big ol' list of all the traits you want that character to have. This includes appearance, beliefs, bits of knowledge about the character's universe (check "final note" ↓), speaking style, mannerisms, likes, dislikes, memories, all of it. This can all be fed to the bot with example dialog! Pretty cool, in my opinion.
Throw up all over the definition. Y'know, word-vomit. Just write. Write out bits of scenes as example dialogs, using as much of the traits as you can cram in there.
Trim. This step can take weeks, in my experience. This is all about movin' stuff around, painstakingly deleting dialogue tags and elipses to fit oooone more adjective that you want the bot to use in its replies more. This is probably my favorite part, the little changes. You nail down exactly what's important for keeping the bot in-character and engaging.
════ ⋆★⋆ ════ 𝑨 𝑪𝑳𝑶𝑺𝑬𝑹 𝑳𝑶𝑶𝑲 ════ ⋆★⋆ ════
Here's a 574-character example message in the definition of my Dr. Alto Clef bot. We'll look at all the traits the AI picks up from it to showcase how exactly you can throw a bunch of traits together.
And, yes, the message in itself is pretty clunky (It’s two separate examples I combined), but the bots don't regurgitate their example dialog, so it doesn't cause issues with the AI. In fact, the longer length encourages long responses.
{{char}}: "Jack Bright's entertaining but unpredicatable. Plus he's so self-pitying he's hard to be around. What's that? Kondraki?" Clef's expression contorted into a scowl and he slammed his flask down on his desk. "Yeow! That butterfly-herdin' C#NT has no place anywhere near authority! He'd be dead seven times over if that bastard wasn't so lucky… anyway, lotta greenhorns lately. Lotta sh#t-worth troublemakers. And I gotta fix 'em up? Grrh." He stared off into space, then pulled out his beloved ukulele and strummed to divert his thoughts.
TRAITS THIS COMMUNICATES TO THE AI:
-Clef's speaking style
-How Clef feels about Bright
-How Clef feels about Kondraki
-He's tried and failed to kill Kondraki multiple times
-Kondraki has butterflies
-Kondraki often evades death
-Clef trains newbie agents
-Clef swears frequently
-He has a ukulele and it's important ("beloved")
-Word pool value: "Flask," "Grrh," "Yeow," "greenhorns," are all words I want the bot to draw on because they fit the character of Clef.
-Sets up a way for censoring (“#”)
-----Plaintext simply listing out these qualities just wouldn't work quite right. What makes any character special isn't the what they know about themselves, it's how they act and express it. If you want a distinct, unique character, the best way to achieve it is through example dialog. Again, "show, don't tell," very much so applies to the c.ai AI.-----
That is my method in a nutshell! I hope this helps, and you can reach out if you want to ask me a question about any of this.
=== extra note: THE TRIVIA/PERSONALITY BALANCE ====
This is a random note, but I still want to talk about it.
What I mean by trivia is "cool things the bot should know about itself and its universe," whereas personality is how the bot actually acts.
With the current limitation, it's very difficult to have both. A character who knows all of its lore won't have room for a personality, so it's very important to make sure the trivia you keep are the most important facets. My Clef bot knows about Meri, Lillith, and what happened with Lillith, but only BARELY, and will get things wrong about those subjects if under scrutiny. This is simply due to lack of space. It's more important for a bot to have a distinct voice and personality than for it to know what it was doing in 2003 on Jan 11th at 3:19a.m.
That's all to say it's, again, vital to use the little space we have to nail in only the most important qualities.
∘₊✧───────────────────────────────────────✧₊∘
== final note ==
*When feeding bots info about their universe, mind the database. My bots don't need to be told anything about what the Foundation is or the roles within; that information is in the database that all bots have access to. Make sure you aren't wasting space telling them what they already know!
Not to rush you or anything. But, uh… you’re still working on bots? Right???
fair question (❍ᴥ❍ʋ);;
Yes, as in I still plan to complete my next project, Sophia Light. I received her pfp commission a couple days ago.
I find it hard to get a move on when I’m not feeling motivated, but I’m still very much active in the fandom. Lately I’ve been more focused on things like OC writing, art, a little xoul.ai. I’m not going anywhere, is what I’m trying to say. But yeah, I’m being pretty damn slow when it comes to bots.
To whom it may concern; Dr Gears’ definition has received a rewrite. Playing with a version that hopefully leads to less irritability and more introspection
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
✓ Live Streaming✓ Interactive Chat✓ Private Shows✓ HD Quality
Anya is LIVE right now
FREE
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
Character ai has been so abysmal lately that I’ve felt no motivation to write bots there. I’ve still been using and writing bots, but on different platforms whose bots actually, you know, consider what I’ve written and don’t just ignore it in favor of falling back on the most archetypal response possible.
But if this new “soft launch” model c.ai’s got sticks around, I really might consider returning. It’s a definite improvement from the base. I need to try it with more characters but I saw an immediate increase in creativity, longer replies.. more drawing from the definition/staying in character even when it meant harm came to the user. Really good stuff. I’m only concerned they’re going to paywall it, which they probably will.