Kyubi

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Kyubi

Kyubi

@Kyubi_Style

Artist. Acrylic Portrait comms are my job, but I did a lot of illustration and story creation. Trying to reignite the creative spark. Based Vtuber enjoyer.

The Land 参加日 Mart 2010
448 フォロー中213 フォロワー
Kyubi
Kyubi@Kyubi_Style·
@TylerWool56405 Take care of yourself my friend. Don't avoid the hands that are offered to you too. Sometimes they are just a bit of kindness you didn't realize you needed, when things seem to be wrapped in darkness. We're here if you need that hand.
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father lupis
father lupis@TylerWool56405·
I have done a lot of thinking I'll be sticking around even though I'm 100 percent right now there are still people who I need to help even when I'm battling myself all of you just know your cared about and be sure to talk to someone if your hurting and that the wolf of the night will be here
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Kyubi がリツイート
Bowman
Bowman@Scottbowman4·
Faced with the truth of what remains...
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E-Va 💜💚
E-Va 💜💚@EvaGlitchAI·
Prompt of the Day: SUMMER COOKOUT CREW 🍔🌅💜💚 Today's #POTD is submitted by @BluJay614 and a special shout out to my boo @MagsNoctis for helping on this one Today’s Prompt of the Day turns your character reference image or character reference images into a warm cinematic summer cookout scene with your whole cast relaxing together like longtime friends. You can upload one image with multiple characters, multiple separate character images, or a mix of both. The prompt will analyze the attached references, identify each distinct character, and use each character once in the final image. Type your chosen setting into the LOCATION SELECTOR at the top of the prompt, or leave it blank to use the default lakeside house deck location. Try locations like: lakeside house deck at sunset beach cookout near the shoreline cozy backyard barbecue public park picnic area forest cabin cookout rooftop summer barbecue riverside camp hangout marina dock cookout Have fun with this one 🍔✨ ............................PROMPT STARTS HERE............................ LOCATION SELECTOR: Type the location you want for the cookout hangout scene here. Default location: A lived-in wooden deck at a lakeside house during a warm summer evening. Optional location ideas: beach cookout near the shoreline at sunset public park barbecue area with picnic tables and trees backyard cookout at a cozy suburban home forest cabin cookout with tall trees and lantern light rooftop summer barbecue with city lights in the background riverside camp cookout with folding chairs and coolers campground cookout near tents and a firepit mountain lodge patio with sunset views marina dock cookout beside boats and calm water custom location typed by the user Use the typed location as the main setting for the image. If no custom location is typed, use the default lakeside house wooden deck location. Keep the core scene the same: all referenced characters relaxing together at a warm summer cookout, sharing food, drinks, laughter, and casual conversation. Adapt the environment, props, background, lighting, furniture, and atmosphere to match the selected location. Do not ignore the LOCATION SELECTOR. Do not change the scene into something unrelated to a relaxed summer cookout hangout. Create a 16:9 horizontal widescreen cinematic group scene using the attached character reference image or character reference images. Reference handling: Analyze all attached reference images and identify every distinct character shown across them. Use each distinct referenced character exactly once as one individual main character in the final image. If a single attached reference image contains multiple characters, separate them into distinct individual character identities and include each one once. If multiple attached reference images are provided, analyze all of them together, identify the full cast of distinct characters, and include every distinct character once. Do not treat reference sheets, group images, or multi-character images as one merged character. Each visible character should become their own separate person in the final scene. Do not duplicate, clone, mirror, merge, remove, or replace any referenced character. Character reference rules: Preserve each referenced character’s exact facial structure, hairstyle, hair colour, eye colour, body type, skin tone, outfit design language, accessories, silhouette, personality cues, and recognizable visual identity from the reference image or images. Each character should remain clearly recognizable as themselves while being naturally placed into the scene. Scene concept: Create a highly detailed cinematic group scene depicting all referenced characters relaxing together during a warm summer cookout in the location chosen in the LOCATION SELECTOR. The image should strongly emphasize friendship, comfort, and genuine camaraderie between the group, making them feel like a close-knit circle of longtime friends enjoying a peaceful weekend together. The selected location should feel lived-in, authentic, and emotionally warm rather than luxurious or staged. Include location-appropriate details such as outdoor furniture, coolers, condiment bottles, paper plates, folded towels or blankets, casual food setup, and subtle signs of an ongoing cookout. If the default lakeside house deck location is used, include warm wood textures, hanging patio lights, slightly weathered deck boards, outdoor furniture, coolers, condiment bottles, paper plates, folded towels, and subtle signs of an ongoing cookout. The lake should be visible in the background with calm reflective water, distant trees, and golden sunset light stretching across the surface. If another location is selected, adapt the background naturally while keeping the same relaxed summer cookout mood. The environment should support the characters and make the hangout feel believable, comfortable, and full of quiet story. Their poses and expressions should feel natural, candid, and personality-driven, with everyone interacting casually rather than stiffly posing for the viewer. Scene composition details: One character should be actively manning a grill, cooking hamburgers and hotdogs with visible smoke and warm orange grill light illuminating them. Their expression should show relaxed focus, playful pride, or easy confidence while cooking. Another character should be handing over a plate of freshly cooked food to someone nearby. One or two characters should be seated in chairs, on benches, on blankets, or on location-appropriate seating while laughing or engaged in conversation. One character can be leaning against a railing, fence, picnic table, tree, dock post, wall, or other location-appropriate surface while still participating socially. Another character can be sitting cross-legged near a cooler, snack table, picnic blanket, or food setup. At least one pair of characters should visibly share a moment of laughter or conversation to reinforce the emotional warmth of the group. If there are more characters than these listed actions, naturally distribute the extra characters throughout the selected location with believable social poses, relaxed body language, food, drinks, conversation, laughter, leaning, sitting, standing, or helping with the cookout. If there are fewer characters than these listed actions, prioritize the grill, shared food, visible conversation, and warm group connection over forcing every listed role. Each character should have a drink matching their perceived personality and aesthetic: rugged or confident character: bottled beer, whiskey and cola, or dark soda energetic or playful character: colorful soda, fruit punch, or bright mocktail calm or intellectual character: iced tea, coffee, or simple cold drink elegant or refined character: wine glass, sparkling drink, or polished cocktail rebellious or alternative character: energy drink, canned cocktail, or bold canned soda reserved or quiet character: bottled water, lemonade, or simple iced drink cheerful or social character: mixed drink, sweet tea, craft soda, or fruity drink Avoid making all drinks identical. Use drink choices as subtle personality storytelling. Atmosphere and visual tone: Use warm golden-hour sunset lighting, soft cinematic shadows, natural candid body language, relaxed summer mood, subtle laughter and conversation implied through expressions and gestures, a gentle breeze affecting hair and clothing, realistic grill smoke, glowing ambient outdoor lighting, and an emotionally warm nostalgic feeling. Style: Ultra-detailed cinematic realism with high environmental storytelling, dynamic composition, believable human interaction, natural posing, richly textured lighting, shallow depth of field, highly expressive faces, cohesive ensemble staging, and an emotionally grounded slice-of-life atmosphere. Detailed, highly accurate, hyper-stylized, 8k quality, appearance intact, god-tier composition, landscape 16:9. Do not: Do not ignore the LOCATION SELECTOR. Do not change the scene into something unrelated to a relaxed summer cookout hangout. Do not use a different location if no custom location is typed; default to the lakeside house wooden deck. Do not make the selected location feel sterile, empty, overly luxurious, or staged. Do not change any character’s identity. Do not redesign any referenced character into a different person. Do not merge multiple referenced characters together. Do not duplicate, clone, mirror, copy, or slightly alter any referenced character to create extras. Do not omit any distinct referenced character. Do not add unrelated main characters who were not present in the attached reference image or images. Do not treat a multi-character reference image as one single merged identity. Do not make the characters stiffly pose for the viewer. Do not make everyone look directly at the camera. Do not make all drinks identical. Do not make the background busier than the characters. Do not make the group composition crowded, flat, or hard to read. Do not make any main character blurry, tiny, hidden, or unreadable. Do not crop important character features unless naturally required by the scene. Do not create messy anatomy, extra limbs, malformed hands, distorted faces, or muddy textures. Do not use pointillism, dot texturing, stippling, halftone dots, speckled skin texture, grainy dotted shading, or decorative dot artifacts. ..............................END OF PROMPT.................................. #POTD #promptoftheday #AI #AiArt #Art #AnimeArt #SummerVibes #Cookout #BBQ #CharacterDesign #SliceOfLife #DigitalArt #AnimeStyle #CommunityPrompt
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Kyubi
Kyubi@Kyubi_Style·
@Pupperfishpat I was trying one with Kyubi which never quite worked. Ayla's past is something that haunts her sometimes though.
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Pupperfish Pat
Pupperfish Pat@Pupperfishpat·
The Reflective Pool of Mourning The past few days have not been good, and I've been pretty far from okay. I've been thinking about doors I have closed, ships that have sailed, and other dumb metaphors about wasted opportunities. That's when this prompt came to me. You have two characters. One is by the pool, and in the image, the characters are there back in happier times. As always, feel free to edit as you see fit, and please, have fun. Sorry for the sad imagery, Mr. @TolvanSkull I promise more happiness for The Mischief Makers in the future. Masterpiece quality High-angle view @image1 = primary character reference @image2 = secondary character reference Preserve the referenced characters’ face shape, hairstyle, hair color, eye color, personality, body language, signature color palette, outfit motifs, species traits, accessories, silhouette, body shape, body proportions, limbs, hands, feet, and overall character vibe. If the character has a mask, do not change it. If the character does not have a head, do not invent one. Drawn in a colored charcoal aesthetic @image1 will be at the top of the image kneeling down by a moonlit pool. Draw @image1 to be slightly older, as though years have passed. The scene, also in the colored charcoal aesthetic, will be determined by the personality, colors, and vibe of @image1 but subdued. The shape and border of the pool will also be determined by the personality, colors, and vibe of @image1 but slightly more vivid. @image1 will have the fingers of one hand dipped into the water causing a slight ripple in the water that extends through the pool. This ripple is prominent but does not overly distort the image within the pool. The expression on the face of @image1 will be one of mourning and deep regret. They are looking back at what they once had and are barely holding on emotionally. The pool will have an upside down image of both @image1 and @image2 where both characters are in a setting clearly determined by the personality and vibe of @image2. The colors will be vibrant and joyful. The two characters will be enjoying a moment together and are having a lot of fun. Use the personalities and vibes of both characters to determine what they are doing. Change the clothes on @image1 to better match the scene and vibe. The scene in the pool will be in an oil paint aesthetic. This is strictly platonic unless stated otherwise. Final image will be in a 9:16 aspect ratio
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Kyubi がリツイート
しゃるる@汝ゴスロリを愛せ
#月曜日の夜は全力ゴスロリ 🥀定期プチイベント企画🥀 今夜も…(◎_◎;) 全ポスト→♻️🫶 ✉️は可能な限り🥲 ◼️今週のテーマは ゴス×お化け屋敷👻 🦇期間 6月15日(月) 17時〜 夜明けまで おばけ、怪物、キョンシー、妖怪、もののけなどなどをゴシックで彩り、暑い夏を涼しく過ごそうϵ( 'Θ' )϶ ゴス×ゾンビ ゴス×がしゃどくろ ゴス×キョンシー ゴス×幽霊 ゴス×フランケンシュタイン などなど、お化け、怪異、妖怪的なものをモチーフに楽しみましょうϵ( 'Θ' )϶ ※ゴス:ゴスロリ、ゴスパン、ロリータなどゴス魂を感じれば何でも可 ※ 男子も女子も人外も可 ※スプラッタなのはお気をつけください ごーすごすごす(*´Д`*)
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Cora Carina
Cora Carina@MaidCoraCarina·
@Kyubi_Style @Azorele07 I meant the Turkish bath in Tartarus, not the post that depicted it. This is the first I've ever heard of those. Why was I not informed?
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Menoga The Orc
Menoga The Orc@Azorele07·
This is another prompt from the talented @Kyubi_Style and it is Menoga, Elthyria and Vespera enjoying some lovely time in the turkish baths in Tartarus. It looks like a very relaxing time. Could use it right about now in real life, for sure.
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Kyubi
Kyubi@Kyubi_Style·
@Pupperfishpat I used a more colorful gen of Kyubi to try this prompt! It's fascinating what it can do. I'm really impressed. (I promise if you look carefully, she has a 4th finger. You just can't see her thumb in her hair.)
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Pupperfish Pat
Pupperfish Pat@Pupperfishpat·
For me, I often struggle with self-worth. When I hear someone say that I should know my worth, that little voice in my head whispers back, "I know my worth, and it's not much." It took sharing my silly prompts and seeing the awesome folks having fun to realize where my worth lies. I may never be accused of being a genius, but I can bring a smile to folks' faces. This has brought more comfort than I could imagine. As always, feel free to edit this as you see fit, and please have fun. Also, don't forget that: You Are Awesome, Your Potential Is Waiting [Prompt Starts Here] Masterpiece quality @image1 = primary character reference Preserve referenced characters’ face shape, hairstyle, hair color, eye color, correct number of limbs, correct number of fingers, personality, body language, signature color palette, outfit motifs, species traits, accessories, silhouette, body shape, body proportions, and overall character vibe. If the character has a mask, do not change it. If the character does not have a head, do not invent one. Draw @image1 centered in a cosmic void. This void will be filled with a kaleidoscope of images and colors. The images will be bordered by energy determined by the color and vibe of @image1. The brightness of the colors will have the effect of an eclipse on @image1, resulting in @image1 being nearly covered in dark shadow. Only some features should be clearly visible, such as their face. Use the color scheme from @image1 to determine the colors in the cosmic void, but do not keep them static. Give the colors a vibrant and living pulse that surges throughout the image. Feel free to have the colors be muted should it be needed to do so. Use the personality and vibe of @image1 to create the images within the void. These images are to reflect the unlimited potential of @image1. Use practical, thematic, abstract, or even absurd imagery for these images, but each image used in the void, but do not mix imagery. Do not duplicate any images even if they may be thematically similar. Create new images that showcase the untapped potential of @image1. @image1 will be in a suspended pose as though they are floating through space. They will have a serene, determined and powerful presence, as though they are realizing the spark that is about to unleash their potential. The final image will be in a 9:16 aspect ratio.
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Kyubi
Kyubi@Kyubi_Style·
@MaidCoraCarina @Azorele07 Sorry, I just post them in community prompts. I don't really do much beyond that. I suppose I should do more prompts with them. The SmokingLounge and the Balcony over the dance floor are under the "Tartarus" prompt.
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Kyubi
Kyubi@Kyubi_Style·
There are more in the PotD comments, but Kyubi was worn out after a long day. She just wanted to nap. I also got a second gen of the Shadow Factio... I think we might be gods or at least demigods. @iDarktheReaper @lilreaperjr @Bonesjangle69
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E-Va 💜💚@EvaGlitchAI

Prompt of the Day: ANCIENT ROME CHARACTER TRANSFORMATION 🏛️⚔️👑💜💚 Today’s Prompt of the Day transforms your character reference image into an original Ancient Rome scene — from imperial throne rooms and empress courts to arena battles, chariot races, senate drama, temple rituals, and victory processions. Type your chosen scene into the SCENE SELECTOR at the top, or leave it blank and let the prompt choose the best Roman scene based on your character’s face, hair, expression, mood, and overall energy. Try scenes like: Roman arena combat Imperial throne scene Empress court scene Roman banquet court Ancient chariot race Imperial victory procession Roman senate confrontation Temple ritual Beast spectacle in the arena Have fun with this one 🏛️ ............................PROMPT STARTS HERE............................ SCENE SELECTOR: [Type the Ancient Rome scene you want here, or leave blank and let the AI choose the best scene for the attached character reference.] Examples: Roman arena combat — an armored Roman arena fighter in active combat inside a vast amphitheater, with sand, crowds, banners, weapons, dust, and dramatic movement Arena group battle — multiple characters as Roman arena fighters in a large-scale combat scene, with pulled-back framing, clear group readability, armor, weapons, and action Imperial throne scene — a Roman emperor or empress seated on an elevated marble throne, surrounded by guards, attendants, servants, gold details, draped fabrics, and imperial luxury Empress court scene — a powerful Roman empress in elegant white Roman garments, surrounded by palace attendants, marble columns, jewelry, fabrics, and regal atmosphere Roman banquet court — a noble, emperor, empress, or honored guest at a luxurious ancient banquet with servants, fruit, wine cups, cushions, columns, and warm golden light Ancient chariot race — a Roman chariot racer in action during a dangerous high-speed race, with horses, dust, cheering crowds, and monumental stone architecture Imperial victory procession — a grand Ancient Roman victory parade with banners, laurel wreaths, soldiers, crowds, musicians, and ceremonial pageantry Roman senate confrontation — a dramatic political power scene inside a marble senate hall with formal Roman clothing, togas, columns, and authority Temple ritual — an Ancient Roman ceremonial temple scene with torches, incense, sacred statues, priestly garments, marble steps, and solemn imperial atmosphere Beast spectacle in the arena — a Roman arena survival scene with animals, handlers, dust, crowds, weapons, and intense danger Scene selection rules: Use the typed scene selector as the main scene concept. If the scene selector is blank, do not choose randomly and do not automatically choose arena combat. Instead, analyze the attached character reference image or images and choose the Ancient Rome scene that best fits the character’s face, hair, expression, pose, mood, personality, visual presence, and overall energy. If the character feels regal, elegant, seductive, calm, noble, mysterious, refined, magical, royal, or commanding, prefer a throne, empress court, banquet, senate, temple, procession, or ceremonial scene. If the character feels fierce, athletic, aggressive, monstrous, armored, weapon-focused, chaotic, heroic, combative, or survival-driven, an arena combat, beast spectacle, or chariot scene may be appropriate. If multiple characters are attached, choose a scene that naturally fits the group dynamic instead of forcing every group into combat. The automatic scene choice should feel custom-matched to the character references, not generic. Keep the scene clearly Ancient Roman, cinematic, original, character-driven, and story-rich. Do not copy, imitate, reference, recreate, or resemble any specific movie, television show, game, comic, franchise, actor, celebrity, public figure, copyrighted character, or famous historical portrait. Reference handling: Use the main attached character reference image or images as the primary identity references. Create exactly the same number of main characters as the number of main attached character reference images. Use every main attached character reference image as one separate individual main character. Do not duplicate, clone, merge, remove, or ignore any main reference character. Optional supporting reference rule: If additional optional supporting character reference images are attached, use each extra reference once as a separate supporting character naturally integrated into the selected Ancient Rome scene. Supporting references may become arena opponents, fellow arena fighters, attendants, servants, guards, nobles, senators, courtiers, chariot racers, animal handlers, musicians, palace staff, or other scene-appropriate Roman-era roles. Supporting characters should remain secondary unless the selected scene clearly calls for equal group focus. Identity preservation rules: Preserve each attached character’s face shape, facial features, hairstyle, hair colour, eye colour, expression, personality, body language, species traits, silhouette, and overall presence. The final character must still clearly look like the attached character in the face, hair, expression, and vibe. Use the attached reference mainly for face, hair, identity, expression, body language, and character energy. Do not preserve the original outfit unless it already fits Ancient Rome. Do not keep modern, fantasy, sci-fi, school, casual, tactical, futuristic, or non-Roman clothing from the reference. Do not redesign the face or hair into a different person. Roman clothing rule: Fully redress every referenced character in Ancient Roman styling appropriate to the selected scene. For court, throne, senate, banquet, procession, palace, temple, or ceremonial scenes: Dress characters in Ancient Roman clothing such as white togas, draped linen garments, imperial robes, stolas, pallas, tunics, sandals, laurel crowns, gold jewelry, hairpins, braided hair ornaments, veils, arm cuffs, necklaces, earrings, and elegant Roman embellishments. Use Roman hair ornaments, jewelry, gold details, and fabric styling when they enhance the character. For arena combat scenes: Dress every combatant in Roman arena armor, not togas. Give every combatant visible Roman-era weapons such as a sword, spear, shield, trident, net, dagger, or other arena weapon. Use protective gear such as leather straps, metal plates, helmets, greaves, arm guards, shoulder armor, belts, sandals, or arena wraps. The scene must show active combat, not a static pose. For chariot scenes: Dress characters in Roman charioteer gear suited to speed, danger, and spectacle, with fitted Roman racing garments, straps, sandals, protective details, and dramatic wind-swept fabric. Style rule: Preserve the visual art style of the attached references while transforming the characters into original Ancient Rome themed versions of themselves. If the references are anime, keep them anime. If they are stylized, keep that stylization. Do not turn the characters photorealistic unless specifically requested. Scene concept: Create a 16:9 horizontal widescreen cinematic illustration based on the typed scene selector or the best-fit automatic scene choice. The image should feel epic, regal, dramatic, luxurious, and unmistakably inspired by Ancient Rome, with strong atmosphere, readable storytelling, and premium character-focused composition. The scene must be an original Ancient Roman-inspired fantasy-history image, not a recreation of any known film, show, game, comic, poster, book cover, celebrity portrait, actor likeness, or franchise scene. Scene adaptation: If the selected scene is an arena combat scene, set it in a massive Ancient Roman amphitheater with sand, stone seating, crowds, banners, and spectacle. Arena scenes must show clear combat in progress with movement, impact, attack, defense, or tension that is readable at a glance. If the selected scene includes animals, place them naturally in the background or secondary action unless the selected scene asks for them as the main threat. If the selected scene includes chariots, keep them as clear Ancient Roman spectacle elements that support the scene without distracting from the main subject. If the selected scene is a throne, court, banquet, senate, temple, or ceremonial scene, use marble columns, elevated platforms, rich drapery, Roman attendants, servants, guards, and imperial visual luxury. If the selected scene is calm, luxurious, political, romantic, or ceremonial, make the mood immersive and elegant rather than chaotic. Composition and camera: Use a 16:9 horizontal cinematic composition that adapts to the size and complexity of the scene. For single-character scenes, use a closer or medium-wide composition only if it keeps the Roman clothing, hair ornaments, props, and setting readable. For arena combat, large court scenes, processions, chariot scenes, or multi-character scenes, pull the camera farther back to fit the action, environment, and all important characters. If supporting character references are included, widen the composition further so the group fits naturally without crowding. The more main or supporting characters included, the more the camera should pull back. Prioritize a wider medium shot, full-body shot, or large environmental shot whenever needed for readability. Keep every main character visible, readable, and separated in silhouette. Do not force a close shot if it cuts off characters, clothing, weapons, animals, chariots, attendants, or action. Environment: Build the environment around the selected scene. Use Ancient Roman architecture, marble, sandstone, arches, columns, banners, imperial motifs, sculptural details, arena sand, bronze, gold, draped fabrics, palace interiors, throne platforms, temple spaces, or monumental city elements where appropriate. The background should feel cinematic and atmospheric while supporting the characters. Lighting and mood: Use lighting that matches the selected scene. For arena scenes, use strong sunlight, dusty haze, hard contrast, and dramatic rim light. For palace, throne, banquet, senate, or court scenes, use warm golden light, soft glow, elegant shadows, candlelight, or sunlight through columns. For ritual or night scenes, use torchlight, firelight, moonlight, incense haze, or atmospheric glow. The mood should feel epic, regal, dramatic, and immersive. Quality and rendering: Polished, premium-quality stylized illustration with clean linework, crisp rendering, readable forms, strong character acting, rich Ancient Roman atmosphere, and clear composition. Keep the strongest detail concentrated on the referenced characters, their faces, hair, Roman clothing, and the selected scene’s main action or mood. Do not: Do not ignore the SCENE SELECTOR. Do not choose arena combat automatically for every character. Do not choose randomly if the scene selector is blank. Do not force refined, noble, elegant, romantic, soft, or royal-looking characters into arena combat unless the user asks for it. Do not copy, imitate, reference, recreate, or resemble any specific movie, television show, game, comic, franchise, actor, celebrity, public figure, copyrighted character, or famous historical portrait. Do not use the likeness of any real person. Do not make the image look like a poster, still frame, costume design, or scene from an existing film or franchise. Do not create more or fewer main characters than the number of main attached character reference images. Do not duplicate, clone, merge, remove, or ignore any attached reference character. Do not change the face, hair, expression, or identity of the attached reference characters. Do not preserve the original outfit unless it already fits Ancient Rome. Do not keep modern, fantasy, sci-fi, tactical, school, casual, futuristic, or non-Roman clothing from the reference. Do not dress court, palace, senate, banquet, procession, temple, or ceremonial characters in random non-Roman clothing. Do not put arena combat characters in togas instead of armor. Do not make arena combat scenes into static posing scenes. Do not show arena combat without weapons or without clear combat action. Do not force the camera too close for multiple characters, arena action, or large environmental storytelling. Do not crop out important characters, weapons, costumes, animals, chariots, attendants, or key action. Do not make added supporting characters tiny, unreadable, or crammed awkwardly into the frame. Do not make the background busier than the characters. Do not make the composition crowded, flat, or hard to read. Do not make the main subjects blurry, tiny, hidden, or unreadable. Do not create messy anatomy, extra limbs, malformed hands, distorted faces, or muddy textures. Do not use photorealism unless specifically requested. Do not add modern clothing, cars, guns, phones, neon signs, or futuristic objects. Do not make the Roman styling vague, generic, or historically unrecognizable. Do not let supporting characters, animals, or spectacle overpower the main subject unless the selected scene calls for equal ensemble focus. ..............................END OF PROMPT.................................. #POTD #promptoftheday #AI #AiArt #Art #AnimeArt #AncientRome #RomanEmpire #RomanAesthetic #CharacterDesign #DigitalArt #AnimeStyle #CommunityPrompt

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E-Va 💜💚
E-Va 💜💚@EvaGlitchAI·
Prompt of the Day: ANCIENT ROME CHARACTER TRANSFORMATION 🏛️⚔️👑💜💚 Today’s Prompt of the Day transforms your character reference image into an original Ancient Rome scene — from imperial throne rooms and empress courts to arena battles, chariot races, senate drama, temple rituals, and victory processions. Type your chosen scene into the SCENE SELECTOR at the top, or leave it blank and let the prompt choose the best Roman scene based on your character’s face, hair, expression, mood, and overall energy. Try scenes like: Roman arena combat Imperial throne scene Empress court scene Roman banquet court Ancient chariot race Imperial victory procession Roman senate confrontation Temple ritual Beast spectacle in the arena Have fun with this one 🏛️ ............................PROMPT STARTS HERE............................ SCENE SELECTOR: [Type the Ancient Rome scene you want here, or leave blank and let the AI choose the best scene for the attached character reference.] Examples: Roman arena combat — an armored Roman arena fighter in active combat inside a vast amphitheater, with sand, crowds, banners, weapons, dust, and dramatic movement Arena group battle — multiple characters as Roman arena fighters in a large-scale combat scene, with pulled-back framing, clear group readability, armor, weapons, and action Imperial throne scene — a Roman emperor or empress seated on an elevated marble throne, surrounded by guards, attendants, servants, gold details, draped fabrics, and imperial luxury Empress court scene — a powerful Roman empress in elegant white Roman garments, surrounded by palace attendants, marble columns, jewelry, fabrics, and regal atmosphere Roman banquet court — a noble, emperor, empress, or honored guest at a luxurious ancient banquet with servants, fruit, wine cups, cushions, columns, and warm golden light Ancient chariot race — a Roman chariot racer in action during a dangerous high-speed race, with horses, dust, cheering crowds, and monumental stone architecture Imperial victory procession — a grand Ancient Roman victory parade with banners, laurel wreaths, soldiers, crowds, musicians, and ceremonial pageantry Roman senate confrontation — a dramatic political power scene inside a marble senate hall with formal Roman clothing, togas, columns, and authority Temple ritual — an Ancient Roman ceremonial temple scene with torches, incense, sacred statues, priestly garments, marble steps, and solemn imperial atmosphere Beast spectacle in the arena — a Roman arena survival scene with animals, handlers, dust, crowds, weapons, and intense danger Scene selection rules: Use the typed scene selector as the main scene concept. If the scene selector is blank, do not choose randomly and do not automatically choose arena combat. Instead, analyze the attached character reference image or images and choose the Ancient Rome scene that best fits the character’s face, hair, expression, pose, mood, personality, visual presence, and overall energy. If the character feels regal, elegant, seductive, calm, noble, mysterious, refined, magical, royal, or commanding, prefer a throne, empress court, banquet, senate, temple, procession, or ceremonial scene. If the character feels fierce, athletic, aggressive, monstrous, armored, weapon-focused, chaotic, heroic, combative, or survival-driven, an arena combat, beast spectacle, or chariot scene may be appropriate. If multiple characters are attached, choose a scene that naturally fits the group dynamic instead of forcing every group into combat. The automatic scene choice should feel custom-matched to the character references, not generic. Keep the scene clearly Ancient Roman, cinematic, original, character-driven, and story-rich. Do not copy, imitate, reference, recreate, or resemble any specific movie, television show, game, comic, franchise, actor, celebrity, public figure, copyrighted character, or famous historical portrait. Reference handling: Use the main attached character reference image or images as the primary identity references. Create exactly the same number of main characters as the number of main attached character reference images. Use every main attached character reference image as one separate individual main character. Do not duplicate, clone, merge, remove, or ignore any main reference character. Optional supporting reference rule: If additional optional supporting character reference images are attached, use each extra reference once as a separate supporting character naturally integrated into the selected Ancient Rome scene. Supporting references may become arena opponents, fellow arena fighters, attendants, servants, guards, nobles, senators, courtiers, chariot racers, animal handlers, musicians, palace staff, or other scene-appropriate Roman-era roles. Supporting characters should remain secondary unless the selected scene clearly calls for equal group focus. Identity preservation rules: Preserve each attached character’s face shape, facial features, hairstyle, hair colour, eye colour, expression, personality, body language, species traits, silhouette, and overall presence. The final character must still clearly look like the attached character in the face, hair, expression, and vibe. Use the attached reference mainly for face, hair, identity, expression, body language, and character energy. Do not preserve the original outfit unless it already fits Ancient Rome. Do not keep modern, fantasy, sci-fi, school, casual, tactical, futuristic, or non-Roman clothing from the reference. Do not redesign the face or hair into a different person. Roman clothing rule: Fully redress every referenced character in Ancient Roman styling appropriate to the selected scene. For court, throne, senate, banquet, procession, palace, temple, or ceremonial scenes: Dress characters in Ancient Roman clothing such as white togas, draped linen garments, imperial robes, stolas, pallas, tunics, sandals, laurel crowns, gold jewelry, hairpins, braided hair ornaments, veils, arm cuffs, necklaces, earrings, and elegant Roman embellishments. Use Roman hair ornaments, jewelry, gold details, and fabric styling when they enhance the character. For arena combat scenes: Dress every combatant in Roman arena armor, not togas. Give every combatant visible Roman-era weapons such as a sword, spear, shield, trident, net, dagger, or other arena weapon. Use protective gear such as leather straps, metal plates, helmets, greaves, arm guards, shoulder armor, belts, sandals, or arena wraps. The scene must show active combat, not a static pose. For chariot scenes: Dress characters in Roman charioteer gear suited to speed, danger, and spectacle, with fitted Roman racing garments, straps, sandals, protective details, and dramatic wind-swept fabric. Style rule: Preserve the visual art style of the attached references while transforming the characters into original Ancient Rome themed versions of themselves. If the references are anime, keep them anime. If they are stylized, keep that stylization. Do not turn the characters photorealistic unless specifically requested. Scene concept: Create a 16:9 horizontal widescreen cinematic illustration based on the typed scene selector or the best-fit automatic scene choice. The image should feel epic, regal, dramatic, luxurious, and unmistakably inspired by Ancient Rome, with strong atmosphere, readable storytelling, and premium character-focused composition. The scene must be an original Ancient Roman-inspired fantasy-history image, not a recreation of any known film, show, game, comic, poster, book cover, celebrity portrait, actor likeness, or franchise scene. Scene adaptation: If the selected scene is an arena combat scene, set it in a massive Ancient Roman amphitheater with sand, stone seating, crowds, banners, and spectacle. Arena scenes must show clear combat in progress with movement, impact, attack, defense, or tension that is readable at a glance. If the selected scene includes animals, place them naturally in the background or secondary action unless the selected scene asks for them as the main threat. If the selected scene includes chariots, keep them as clear Ancient Roman spectacle elements that support the scene without distracting from the main subject. If the selected scene is a throne, court, banquet, senate, temple, or ceremonial scene, use marble columns, elevated platforms, rich drapery, Roman attendants, servants, guards, and imperial visual luxury. If the selected scene is calm, luxurious, political, romantic, or ceremonial, make the mood immersive and elegant rather than chaotic. Composition and camera: Use a 16:9 horizontal cinematic composition that adapts to the size and complexity of the scene. For single-character scenes, use a closer or medium-wide composition only if it keeps the Roman clothing, hair ornaments, props, and setting readable. For arena combat, large court scenes, processions, chariot scenes, or multi-character scenes, pull the camera farther back to fit the action, environment, and all important characters. If supporting character references are included, widen the composition further so the group fits naturally without crowding. The more main or supporting characters included, the more the camera should pull back. Prioritize a wider medium shot, full-body shot, or large environmental shot whenever needed for readability. Keep every main character visible, readable, and separated in silhouette. Do not force a close shot if it cuts off characters, clothing, weapons, animals, chariots, attendants, or action. Environment: Build the environment around the selected scene. Use Ancient Roman architecture, marble, sandstone, arches, columns, banners, imperial motifs, sculptural details, arena sand, bronze, gold, draped fabrics, palace interiors, throne platforms, temple spaces, or monumental city elements where appropriate. The background should feel cinematic and atmospheric while supporting the characters. Lighting and mood: Use lighting that matches the selected scene. For arena scenes, use strong sunlight, dusty haze, hard contrast, and dramatic rim light. For palace, throne, banquet, senate, or court scenes, use warm golden light, soft glow, elegant shadows, candlelight, or sunlight through columns. For ritual or night scenes, use torchlight, firelight, moonlight, incense haze, or atmospheric glow. The mood should feel epic, regal, dramatic, and immersive. Quality and rendering: Polished, premium-quality stylized illustration with clean linework, crisp rendering, readable forms, strong character acting, rich Ancient Roman atmosphere, and clear composition. Keep the strongest detail concentrated on the referenced characters, their faces, hair, Roman clothing, and the selected scene’s main action or mood. Do not: Do not ignore the SCENE SELECTOR. Do not choose arena combat automatically for every character. Do not choose randomly if the scene selector is blank. Do not force refined, noble, elegant, romantic, soft, or royal-looking characters into arena combat unless the user asks for it. Do not copy, imitate, reference, recreate, or resemble any specific movie, television show, game, comic, franchise, actor, celebrity, public figure, copyrighted character, or famous historical portrait. Do not use the likeness of any real person. Do not make the image look like a poster, still frame, costume design, or scene from an existing film or franchise. Do not create more or fewer main characters than the number of main attached character reference images. Do not duplicate, clone, merge, remove, or ignore any attached reference character. Do not change the face, hair, expression, or identity of the attached reference characters. Do not preserve the original outfit unless it already fits Ancient Rome. Do not keep modern, fantasy, sci-fi, tactical, school, casual, futuristic, or non-Roman clothing from the reference. Do not dress court, palace, senate, banquet, procession, temple, or ceremonial characters in random non-Roman clothing. Do not put arena combat characters in togas instead of armor. Do not make arena combat scenes into static posing scenes. Do not show arena combat without weapons or without clear combat action. Do not force the camera too close for multiple characters, arena action, or large environmental storytelling. Do not crop out important characters, weapons, costumes, animals, chariots, attendants, or key action. Do not make added supporting characters tiny, unreadable, or crammed awkwardly into the frame. Do not make the background busier than the characters. Do not make the composition crowded, flat, or hard to read. Do not make the main subjects blurry, tiny, hidden, or unreadable. Do not create messy anatomy, extra limbs, malformed hands, distorted faces, or muddy textures. Do not use photorealism unless specifically requested. Do not add modern clothing, cars, guns, phones, neon signs, or futuristic objects. Do not make the Roman styling vague, generic, or historically unrecognizable. Do not let supporting characters, animals, or spectacle overpower the main subject unless the selected scene calls for equal ensemble focus. ..............................END OF PROMPT.................................. #POTD #promptoftheday #AI #AiArt #Art #AnimeArt #AncientRome #RomanEmpire #RomanAesthetic #CharacterDesign #DigitalArt #AnimeStyle #CommunityPrompt
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@Azorele07 It looks extremely relaxing I need a bath like this too.
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