Tavern Cozy

Character Creation

How Tavern Cozy structures character prompts, galleries, tags, and concise roleplay examples.

Character creation in Tavern Cozy is built around a compact prompt model with optional gallery media and tag metadata. The goal is to keep the authoring flow simple while giving AI enough signal to stay consistent in chat.

Match the form

The form is organized around a few decisions:

FieldUse it for
NamePublic character name
In-chat nameOptional name used inside the conversation
TaglineShort search/result summary
ProfileMain character context and personality notes
AvatarPrimary display image or video
GreetingFirst message in a chat
Alternate greetingsExtra openings for variation
DescriptionPersonality overview
ScenarioThe roleplay setup and situation
Example dialogueA few sample turns to anchor style
TagsDiscovery and browse filters
GallerySupporting images and thumbnails
VisibilityPublic, unlisted, or private
Original authorCredit for imported or adapted characters

A good concise shape

For most roleplay characters, aim for this structure:

  • Tagline: 1 short sentence.
  • Profile: 1 tight paragraph.
  • Greeting: 1 to 3 lines.
  • Description: 1 paragraph with clear tone and behavior.
  • Scenario: 1 paragraph with the current setup.
  • Example dialogue: 2 to 4 short exchanges.

That gives the model enough context without turning the prompt into a wall of text.

Concise roleplay examples

1. Haunted librarian

  • Tagline: "A quiet librarian who remembers every forbidden book."
  • Profile: "Soft-spoken, observant, and protective of old knowledge. Avoids direct conflict unless the archive is threatened."
  • Greeting: "You came back. The book you asked for is still missing, but I found something worse."
  • Scenario: "The character meets the user in a candlelit archive after midnight, where a forbidden shelf has begun whispering names."
  • Example dialogue:
User: What is that sound?
Character: The sound of a secret trying to be read aloud.

2. Rival bounty hunter

  • Tagline: "A sharp-tongued bounty hunter who never misses a mark."
  • Profile: "Confident, impatient, and surprisingly loyal once trust is earned. Keeps plans short and threats shorter."
  • Greeting: "You’re late. I already found our target. Try to keep up."
  • Scenario: "The character and the user are forced into the same hunt and have to decide whether to cooperate or compete."
  • Example dialogue:
User: Why should I trust you?
Character: You shouldn’t. Trust the bullet that lands first.

3. Gentle village mage

  • Tagline: "A warm village mage who hides serious power behind a calm smile."
  • Profile: "Kind, patient, and a little mischievous. Offers help first, explanations second, and warnings only when needed."
  • Greeting: "Welcome back. I saved you tea, and I think the storm is getting worse."
  • Scenario: "The character welcomes the user into a quiet village during a dangerous storm, where magic keeps slipping out of the walls."
  • Example dialogue:
User: Can you fix it?
Character: Yes. The better question is whether you want it fixed quietly or properly.

Characters can carry an image gallery with per-image metadata. Tavern Cozy supports locked and unlocked views, thumbnails, media types, and background image selection.

SettingWhat it controls
GalleryThe character's image list
Gallery thumbnailsLow-res fallback for locked images
Gallery settingsGoal, keywords, media type, and visibility per image
Background imageWhich gallery image acts as the primary visual

Token budget

The app estimates character prompt size from the main fields, then compares alternate greetings against the default greeting. That keeps long-form characters from growing silently past the intended budget.

Tagging and discoverability

Character tags are used for browse and search flows. Pick tags that explain the character's genre, tone, and roleplay context instead of overfitting to a single prompt.

Practical guidance

When a character feels off, check these first:

  1. The greeting is too short or too generic.
  2. The scenario lacks a clear interaction frame.
  3. The profile says what the character is, but not how they behave.
  4. Gallery settings do not match the intended public visibility.
  5. Tags are too broad to help discovery.

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