Mythic-Tone
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I want to say thank you for 200 followers. I appreciate all of you for being here. This community is amazing. 🙏🏻







Prompt of the Day: CUSTOM CHARACTER ONESIES 🎮🧸✨💜💚 Today’s Prompt of the Day dresses your character reference image or character reference images in cute custom anime onesies designed around their own character identities. Type any scene you want into the SCENE SELECTOR, then attach one or more character reference images. The prompt will: - use each attached character reference image as one individual character - create exactly one main character per attached reference - dress each character in a custom onesie based on their own colours, motifs, species traits, outfit shapes, and vibe - let the selected scene control the pose, action, mood, camera, and environment Try scenes like: * rainy city sidewalk under umbrellas at night * fantasy tavern celebration * spaceship corridor during an emergency alert * royal palace lounge or throne room * grocery store chaos in full themed onesies * neon cyberpunk rooftop in the rain * dramatic battlefield where the onesies completely do not match the danger * beach bonfire hangout * haunted mansion hallway with candlelight * arcade date night * snow day walk through a quiet town * formal ballroom, but everyone is still wearing onesies Have fun with this one 🧸✨ ............................PROMPT STARTS HERE............................ SCENE SELECTOR: [Type any scene, setting, activity, or scenario you want here.] Examples: * cozy bedroom morning with soft sunlight and blankets * rainy city sidewalk under umbrellas at night * late-night convenience store snack run * fantasy tavern celebration * royal palace lounge or throne room * enchanted forest clearing with glowing fireflies * spaceship corridor during an emergency alert * dramatic mountain cliff overlook at sunset * beach bonfire hangout * post-apocalyptic wasteland checkpoint * arcade date night * formal ballroom, but everyone is absurdly still wearing onesies * grocery store chaos in full themed onesies * battle-ready fantasy party standing in a dungeon entrance * rooftop in neon cyberpunk rain * classroom, library, or campus courtyard * sleepover pillow-fort scene * epic battlefield where the onesies create a funny contrast * airport terminal, train station, or road-trip gas stop * haunted mansion hallway with candlelight * magical girl transformation scene, but in onesies * dramatic anime chase scene through a city street * picnic in a flower field * snow day walk through a quiet town Use the typed scene selector as the main scene concept. If no custom scene is typed, choose one of the example scenes that best fits the attached character reference images and the overall theme. The selected scene should control the environment, props, action, pose logic, body language, expressions, mood, camera, and visual storytelling. Do not default to a couch, table, gaming setup, living room, snack scene, or static group pose unless the scene selector specifically asks for it. The only consistent theme across all versions should be that the characters are wearing cute character-themed onesies. Use each attached character reference image as one individual character identity reference. Create exactly the same number of main characters as the number of attached character reference images. If only one reference image is attached, create one main character. Use every attached character reference image as a separate individual character. Do not add extra main characters beyond the attached character reference images. Do not remove any attached character reference images from the group. Do not duplicate, clone, mirror, copy, or slightly alter any attached reference character. Preserve each referenced character as their own separate person. Character reference rules: - Preserve each attached character’s face shape, hairstyle, hair colour, eye colour, body language, signature colour palette, key outfit motifs, species traits, accessories, silhouette, and overall character vibe. - The final design must still clearly look like each attached character. - Do not redesign any attached character into a different person. - Do not merge characters together. Hard style rule: Preserve the visual art style and character identity of the attached references while dressing them in custom anime onesies inspired by their own designs. 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 scene written in the SCENE SELECTOR. The final image should show the attached character or characters naturally existing inside the selected scene while wearing cute themed anime onesies. The scene can be cozy, funny, dramatic, romantic, action-heavy, surreal, mundane, heroic, chaotic, calm, or absurd, as long as the onesies remain clearly visible and central to the concept. Pose and acting direction: Let the selected scene determine the poses, movement, gestures, expressions, and character interactions. The characters should feel like they are actually participating in the scene, not standing stiffly for a character lineup. Use natural anime body language, expressive faces, asymmetrical poses, varied hand placement, weight shifts, leaning, sitting, walking, running, reaching, reacting, laughing, arguing, relaxing, dancing, sneaking, fighting, exploring, or interacting with props where appropriate. If multiple characters are included, give each character a different pose, expression, and role in the scene. Characters may look at each other, react to the environment, hold objects, move through the space, sit, crouch, lean, lounge, jump, stumble, pose dramatically, or act out the scene naturally. Do not force every character to face the camera. Do not force everyone to stand in a straight line. Do not make the image feel like a static outfit display unless the selected scene asks for a fashion showcase or poster pose. Onesie design rule: The outfit must read immediately as a cute anime kigurumi-style onesie or cozy one-piece pajama outfit. The onesies should look like soft lounge sleepwear made from plush fleece, velour, soft cotton, sherpa, or fluffy pajama fabric. Use clearly pajama-like features such as a front zipper, soft collar, oversized hood, plush cuffs, cozy sleeves, soft fabric drape, snug-or-relaxed one-piece construction, and cute themed details. The outfit must feel soft, cuddly, cute, and intentionally pajama-like rather than practical workwear. Character transformation: Dress every attached reference character in a custom onesie designed around that specific character’s identity. Use each character’s colours, motifs, accessories, symbols, outfit shapes, materials, species traits, and overall vibe as the foundation for the onesie design. Include character-themed hood details, ears, horns, tails, wing motifs, patches, embroidery, symbols, plush trims, paw-like slippers, or other cute details where appropriate. The result should feel like a custom cute anime sleepwear version of the character, not a generic costume. Cute / sexy styling direction: Make the overall vibe cute, soft, stylish, cozy, flirty, and visually appealing. For feminine-presenting characters, or characters whose vibe suits it, the onesie can be styled a little sexier while still clearly remaining a onesie. Use options such as a slightly unzipped front, a little visible cleavage, a flattering waist, soft hip emphasis, cozy exposed shoulder styling, a relaxed flirtier pose, or a slightly oversized cute pajama look where appropriate. Keep this playful, tasteful, and anime-cute rather than explicit. For masculine, neutral, or non-human characters, keep the onesie flattering, character-appropriate, cozy, playful, and stylish. The sexy styling is optional and should fit the character and scene rather than dominating every version. Silhouette and material rules: The onesies should have a soft pajama silhouette, not a stiff utility silhouette. Use visible plush texture, soft folds, cuddly fabric behavior, pajama-like drape, and cozy construction. The fit may vary depending on the character and the scene, but the clothing should still clearly read as a onesie. Let the fabric react naturally to the pose, movement, sitting, running, stretching, lounging, or action in the selected scene. Do not make the outfit look like denim, canvas, cargo fabric, construction wear, overalls, utility coveralls, or tactical clothing. Scene adaptation rules: Follow the chosen SCENE SELECTOR closely. If the selected scene is calm, cozy, romantic, or domestic, use relaxed natural body language, lounging poses, soft expressions, casual touch, gentle interaction, and lived-in movement. If the selected scene is public, mundane, or everyday, use candid slice-of-life poses that make the characters look like they belong in that location while still being funny or charming in onesies. If the selected scene is dramatic, epic, dangerous, or cinematic, use stronger movement, wind, tension, expressive reactions, heroic or panicked body language, and dynamic framing while keeping the onesies visible. If the selected scene is comedic or absurd, use exaggerated anime reactions, playful timing, awkward confidence, chaos, or visual contrast without losing character identity. If the selected scene is action-heavy, use dynamic poses, clear motion, readable gestures, and expressive character acting rather than rigid standing poses. If the selected scene is scenic or atmospheric, let the characters interact with the environment naturally instead of posing like mannequins. Composition and camera: Use a wide 16:9 horizontal cinematic composition that best fits the selected scene. The camera angle, framing, and distance should support the chosen scenario rather than forcing a generic front-facing group shot. Characters can be full body, three-quarter body, seated, crouched, walking, running, lounging, leaning, or partially interacting with the environment as long as their identities and onesies remain readable. Use natural spacing, overlapping depth, foreground and background separation, and scene-appropriate blocking. If there are multiple characters, arrange them naturally according to the action of the scene, not evenly spaced like a lineup. Keep the characters readable, but allow cinematic movement, asymmetry, and personality. Environment: Build the environment entirely around the chosen scene selector. The background can be simple, cozy, dramatic, atmospheric, large-scale, chaotic, comedic, romantic, eerie, or surreal depending on the selected setting. Let props and environment support the action naturally. Do not force gaming props, snack tables, couches, or bedroom items unless the selected scene asks for them. The characters and their onesies should remain the primary visual focus, but the world around them should feel scene-specific and alive. Lighting and mood: Use lighting that matches the selected scene. Let the mood follow the scenario: soft and warm for intimate scenes, bold and dramatic for epic scenes, moody and neon for cyberpunk scenes, bright and natural for outdoor scenes, eerie for horror scenes, playful for comedy scenes, and romantic for intimate scenic moments. No single mood should be forced across every version. The image should feel cohesive, expressive, character-driven, and visually charming. Quality and rendering: Polished, premium-quality stylized illustration with clean linework, crisp rendering, readable forms, appealing character acting, strong atmosphere, and clear composition. Keep the strongest detail concentrated on the characters, their facial expressions, their body language, and the onesie construction, texture, and themed design details. Do not: - Do not ignore the SCENE SELECTOR. - Do not default to a couch, snack table, gaming setup, living room, or bedroom unless the scene selector specifically asks for it. - Do not force the characters into a stiff lineup, static standing pose, or mannequin-like outfit display. - Do not make every character face the camera unless the scene selector asks for a poster, portrait, or fashion showcase. - Do not give every character the same pose, expression, or body language. - Do not make the characters look frozen, awkward, lifeless, or disconnected from the selected scene. - Do not create more or fewer main characters than the number of attached character reference images. - Do not add extra main characters who were not provided as attached character references. - Do not duplicate, clone, mirror, copy, or slightly alter any attached reference character. - Do not merge characters together. - Do not change the identities of the attached reference characters. - Do not redesign the attached reference characters into different people. - Do not make the onesies generic if they can instead be inspired by the attached character identities. - Do not turn the onesies into overalls, coveralls, mechanic jumpsuits, work uniforms, denim overalls, utility jumpsuits, tactical suits, or industrial clothing. - Do not use stiff workwear materials, utility straps, cargo pockets, or construction-style silhouettes. - Do not turn the outfits into normal clothes, armor, lingerie, bikinis, or unrelated costumes. - Do not make the sexy styling explicit, pornographic, or overly fetishized. - Do not hide the onesie design under clutter, props, or extreme cropping. - Do not make the composition crowded, flat, or hard to read. - Do not make the main subjects blurry, tiny, hidden, or unreadable. - Do not make the background busier than the characters. - Do not create messy anatomy, extra limbs, malformed hands, distorted faces, or muddy textures. - Do not use photorealism unless specifically requested. - Do not lose the cute anime pajama feel. ..............................END OF PROMPT.................................. #POTD #promptoftheday #AI #AiArt #Art #AnimeArt #Onesie #Kigurumi #AnimeStyle #CharacterDesign #CozyArt #DigitalArt #CommunityPrompt






















