OC to AI character

Bring your OC to life as a playable AI character.

Turn original character notes, lore, relationships, and visual references into a structured interactive AI character draft that others can understand and experience.

Best for

  • OC artists with character sheets, lore, and relationship notes
  • Writers who want readers to meet a character interactively
  • Creators exploring whether their OC works as a shareable character experience

Starter templates

Use one of these directions instead of starting from a blank prompt.

OC profile roomAsk my OC pageFirst scene showcase

Workflow

Paste OC traits, backstory, visual style, relationships, and world rules

Paste OC traits, backstory, visual style, relationships, and world rules.

Generate a character fidelity card, scene premise, and first interaction

Generate a character fidelity card, scene premise, and first interaction.

Review what is public, what is private memory, and what needs creator control

Review what is public, what is private memory, and what needs creator control.

What the first output should include

OC fidelity checklist

Use this to keep the character consistent while you refine the experience in Seele Workspace.

Public character intro

Use this to keep the character consistent while you refine the experience in Seele Workspace.

Private creator notes

Use this to keep the character consistent while you refine the experience in Seele Workspace.

Playable first-scene brief

Use this to keep the character consistent while you refine the experience in Seele Workspace.

Ways to use the draft

Draft the characterRefine the voicePlan the first sceneShare when ready

Review before sharing

Use the first draft as a starting point. Review character fidelity, rights, safety, memory assumptions, and publishing settings before sharing it publicly.

FAQ

Who is this page for?

This page is for original oc creators who want to turn a static character, card, or story setup into an interactive AI character project.

What should I prepare?

Prepare character notes, relationship context, setting, example dialogue, safety boundaries, and the first scene or interaction you want to test.

Is this meant for final publishing?

Not immediately. Treat the first output as a draft, then review rights, safety, fidelity, and quality before public release.

How should I improve the result?

Check whether the character stays in voice, whether the first scene is easy to enter, and whether the boundaries are clear enough for sharing.

Start with a structured character project brief

Start with a clear brief, then refine the character voice, scene setup, boundaries, and shareable experience inside Seele Workspace.