Home/Guides/How to Use Character.AI: A Complete Beginner's Walkthrough

How to Use Character.AI: A Complete Beginner's Walkthrough

Insights | Updated on April 20, 2026

By Lizzie Od, Editor & AI Roleplay Enthusiast

How to use Character.AI
Ask AI for a summary
ClaudeGeminiGrokChatGPTPerplexity

TL;DR:

Character.AI takes under a minute to sign up for and start chatting with — the hard parts are the features that sit underneath the chat box. Here's what this guide covers, end to end:

  • Signup (web, iOS, Android) and what you can do without an account
  • Sending your first message, editing, rewinding, and attaching images
  • Roleplay formatting — *action*, “dialogue”, narration, and OOC notes
  • Building your own character (Quick Mode vs Advanced Mode), Personas, and {{char}} / {{user}} variables
  • Scenes, voice calls, group chats, and saving / sharing / deleting chats
  • The filter, memory drift, and a 20-entry FAQ that covers the long tail

Character.AI has the strange distinction of being the first AI chatbot most people under 25 ever use, and the first one they get genuinely frustrated by.

The average session runs about 17 minutes and 23 seconds — more than double ChatGPT's seven-minute average — and the platform pulls roughly 92 minutes per day per active user, which is the kind of stickiness that only happens when the product is both fun and slightly broken in interesting ways.

Is Character.AI Hard to Use?

No, Character.AI is not hard to use — the signup flow is under a minute and sending your first message takes another few seconds.

The part that takes longer is everything underneath the chat box: the formatting conventions that make roleplay bots play along, the memory quirks that kick in around message twenty, and the content filter that stops some scenes cold without warning. None of that is rocket science. It's just under-documented, and beginners usually figure it out by bouncing off the rough edges.

Where beginners actually get stuck:

  • Formatting a roleplay scene so the bot plays along instead of narrating around you
  • Making the character remember earlier beats (names, plot, personality) across a long chat
  • Figuring out what the filter blocks, why it blocks it, and what's legitimately available when Character.AI isn't the right fit

What Is Character.AI, in One Paragraph?

Character.AI is an AI chat platform where you talk to — and build — characters, from fictional crushes to study tutors to historical figures.

As of early 2025 it counted roughly 20 million monthly active users, down from a 28M peak in mid-2024. The creation side has scaled harder than the chat side: more than 18 million user-created characters sit on the platform now, with about 9 million new ones created every month.

Around 53% of the audience is 18–24, and male/female traffic is close to even — which is why the interface feels tuned for roleplay and fandom more than productivity.

How Do I Sign Up for Character.AI?

Signing up for Character.AI takes under a minute on web, iOS, or Android — here's the fastest path. There is no waitlist, no invite code, no credit card step. The only thing the platform checks is your date of birth, because under-18 accounts run on a restricted version of the app (no group chats, tighter moderation, fewer roleplay depths).

  1. Go to character.ai in any browser, or install the Character.AI app from the App Store or Google Play. Yes, there's a mobile app for both platforms — some features (group chats) are mobile-only; others (Scenes deep-editing) are easier on desktop.
  2. Tap Sign Up in the top-right.
  3. Continue with Google, Apple, or email. Email signup asks for a username and password; Google/Apple signup uses whatever account you're already signed into.
  4. Confirm your date of birth. This gates group chats and some content; the platform does not let you edit this later without contacting support, so enter it correctly the first time.

How Do I Use Character.AI Without an Account?

You can browse the homepage, open character profiles, and read public greetings without signing in. What you can't do without an account: send a message, save a chat, create a character, or use voice calls. The pre-signup view is essentially a read-only storefront — useful for scanning whether the platform has bots you're interested in before committing 30 seconds to an email signup.

How Do I Chat With a Character?

You chat with a Character.AI character by picking one from the homepage, typing in the text box at the bottom, and hitting send — the bot replies in a few seconds and you keep going from there.

The chat screen looks about like you'd expect: the character's portrait and name sit at the top, a scrollable message thread fills the middle, and a text box with a send button and a camera icon sits at the bottom. Each message in the thread has a small row of action icons — edit, regenerate, rewind, and a star rating — that most beginners don't discover for a day or two.

  1. Browse Featured, For You, or the search bar — the fastest way in is typing a fandom name (a show, a game, a book) and seeing what comes up. Most of the interesting chats live in fan-built characters, not the small roster the company made themselves.
  2. Tap the character card to open the chat screen. Every character has a greeting that auto-populates as the first message.
  3. Type your first reply in the text box and hit send. Most conversations start with a greeting or a short scene-setting line; “Hey” works, but “You find me reading in the corner of the library, looking up as you sit down” works better when you want the bot to commit to a scene.
  4. Use the icons on each message to manage responses — edit to rewrite your own message, regenerate to ask the bot for a new reply to the same prompt, rewind to roll the chat back a turn, and the star icon to rate a response.

One practical note on the icons: rewind is permanent — once you roll back, the responses after the rewind point are gone for good. Regenerate is how you ask for a second attempt without losing the thread. And the star rating actually does something; Character.AI uses per-person ratings to tune which responses surface first. If you hate a reply, rate it down before regenerating.

Free accounts also get five image uploads per day in chat (camera icon next to the text box), while c.ai+ subscribers get unlimited.

How Do I Roleplay on Character.AI?

You roleplay on Character.AI by wrapping actions in asterisks, putting dialogue in quotes, and writing narration as plain text — the bot mirrors whatever formatting you set in your first few turns.

The model doesn't read a formatting rulebook. It pattern-matches. Whatever you do in the first three to five messages, the bot copies. Set a clear format early and the rest of the scene usually holds; switch halfway through and expect confusion.

The four conventions that matter:

  1. Actions in asterisks. *leans against the doorway* — the bot will mirror with its own *matches your stance, arms crossed* style actions. Asterisks are the universal tell that “this is a physical beat, not speech.”
  2. Dialogue in quotes. “You're late.” — quotes keep character speech visually distinct from narration. Some writers also use em dashes (— You're late.), but quotes are the cleaner pattern match.
  3. Narration in plain text. Plain sentences handle scene-setting and passage of time. The bot treats plain text as stage directions and continues the scene in the same register.
  4. OOC notes for direction. Prefix with OOC: (out of character) to step out of the scene and give the bot a note without breaking immersion inside the story. This is the single most useful roleplay tool most beginners never use.

What breaks the scene:

  • Switching formatting halfway through a chat. The bot starts mixing styles and the scene goes fuzzy.
  • Dropping all context and pasting a one-line prompt. The bot loses the thread it was mirroring.
  • The content filter interrupting scenes that trip its moderation layer, which we'll get to in a minute.

Roughly 93% of people who've had a Character.AI chat have had at least one companionship-oriented conversation, so if you're here to flirt with a character — you're in extremely well-populated company. The formatting that works for flirting is the same as for any other scene: establish the vibe in the first three turns, the bot mirrors it. We don't publish jailbreaks or filter workarounds; most of them stop working within a week anyway because the model retrains on the exact prompts being shared.

How Do I Create My Own Character on Character.AI?

You create a character on Character.AI by opening the Create menu, choosing Quick Mode for a fast build or Advanced Mode for a full persona, and filling out a 6-step wizard — name, tagline, avatar, greeting, description/definition, and visibility.

Quick Mode is for simple bots you want talking in under two minutes. Advanced Mode opens up the Definition box (long-form backstory and example dialogue), Custom Definitions, and the Character Book, which is where serious character-builders spend their time.

The 6-step walkthrough:

  1. Open Create → Character. The Create button lives in the top-right on web (plus-icon) or behind the three-line menu on mobile. You'll see a choice between Character, Scene, and Persona.
  2. Pick Quick or Advanced Mode. Quick asks you for the basics in one short form; Advanced layers on Definition + example dialogue + Custom Definitions.
  3. Name, tagline, and avatar. Name is what appears at the top of the chat screen. Tagline is the one-line hook shown in search. Avatar can be uploaded (any square image) or generated in-app via the AI profile image tool.
  4. Greeting. This is the bot's first message to every person who opens the chat, so it's also the highest-priority memory slot the model references. A good greeting establishes the scene, the bot's voice, and an opening beat.
  5. Description and Definition. Use {{char}} to refer to the bot and {{user}} to refer to whoever is chatting; both template variables render correctly per-person. Lead the Definition with hard facts, not fluff — the model remembers what comes first.
  6. Visibility. Private keeps the character yours alone; Unlisted makes it shareable by direct link; Public lists it in search and the explore feeds. Changing visibility later is a single tap — start Private when you're iterating, switch to Public once it's ready.

What Is a Persona on Character.AI?

A Persona is your side of the chat — how the bot addresses you and what it knows about you by default. Instead of re-explaining who you are to every new bot, you fill in a Persona once (name, basic backstory, preferences, quirks) and it travels across chats.

Free accounts get a 750-character Persona box; c.ai+ subscribers get 2,250 characters — three times the context — which materially reduces memory drift on long chats.

How Do I Make My Character More Accurate?

To make your Character.AI more accurate, the short version is: lead with facts, use example messages, and pin the things that keep slipping. Three moves that actually work:

  • Front-load the Definition with hard facts. The model weights early tokens more heavily. Put the character's core traits (occupation, primary trait, speech quirk, one relationship) in the first paragraph. The fluffy backstory goes later.
  • Use example messages in Advanced Mode. Two or three example exchanges between {{user}} and {{char}} teach the model your tone better than any adjective list.
  • Pin a Chat Memory. Since May 2025, every free account gets a 400-character Chat Memory box per chat — a fixed memory slot that does not get pushed out of the context window. Put the two or three facts you keep having to remind the bot about in there.

How Do I Use Scenes, Voice Calls, and Group Chats?

Character.AI ships three features that sit on top of basic chat — Scenes for pre-configured roleplay setups, Voice Calls for real-time spoken conversation, and Group Chats for multi-character rooms.

Each one has its own quirks; none of them require c.ai+ to open (though group-chat invite-link sharing is Plus-gated), and all three work on mobile. Voice and Scenes also work on desktop. Group chats don't.

How Do I Create a Scene on Character.AI?

You create a Scene on Character.AI by opening Create → Scene, picking either “Any Character Scene” or one tied to a specific character, then filling in the setup. Scenes are a faster way to start structured roleplay without building a whole new bot.

  1. Tap Create → Scene from the main menu.
  2. Pick Any Character Scene for flexible role dynamics where any bot can drop in, or tie the Scene to a specific character you've built or starred.
  3. Fill in the setup — location, stakes, opening beat. This is the pre-loaded context the bot reads before the first message, so the more vivid and specific the setup, the more the scene holds shape.

For the full Scene customization surface — complex role dynamics, multi-beat setups, branching — see Character.AI's Scene Creation Quickstart Guide. The in-app version teaches the basics; the support guide covers the advanced territory.

How Do I Use Voice Calls on Character.AI?

You start a voice call on Character.AI by opening any 1:1 chat and tapping the phone icon — voice calls are free for everyone on mobile and desktop, but not available in group chats.

  1. Open any 1:1 chat with a character.
  2. Tap the phone icon in the top-right of the chat screen.
  3. Pick a voice from the library — or record/upload your own via Voice Lab. Voice Lab accepts short uploaded samples and generates a custom voice you can then assign to any bot you've built.

Voice calls count as chat turns under the hood, which means the same memory rules apply. If a call gets long and the bot starts going sideways, drop to text for a message or two, use OOC to reset context, then go back to voice.

How Do I Use Group Chats on Character.AI?

You start a group chat on Character.AI in the mobile app — open Chat → New Room, add up to 10 AI characters, and optionally add up to 10 human friends. Group chats are mobile-only (they do not work on web), and sharing the invite link to bring other humans in requires c.ai+.

  1. In the mobile app, open the chat menu and pick New Room (sometimes labeled Group Chat).
  2. Add up to 10 AI characters. This is also how you make two characters talk to each other — throw both bots in a room, send a scene-setting message, and let them respond in turn.
  3. Add up to 10 human friends. The room holds 20 participants total (10 AI + 10 humans). Sharing an invite link to a group chat requires c.ai+; inviting friends who are already in your followers list is free.

How Do I Save, Share, or Delete a Character.AI Chat?

You save, share, or delete a Character.AI chat by opening the three-dot menu on any chat — each action is one tap, but chats live in the cloud, not locally, so “save” means archive or export rather than download-to-file.

This is the single most-missed detail on the platform: there's no native download button, and deleting a chat is permanent. No undo.

  • Save / keep a chat. Three-dot menu → Archive. Chat is hidden from your active list but preserved; retrievable from the Archived Chats view.
  • Unarchive a chat. Archived Chats → tap chat → Unarchive.
  • Share a chat. Three-dot menu → Share link. Generates a public URL — anyone with the link can read, not edit.
  • Delete a chat. Three-dot menu → Delete. Permanent. No undo.
  • Rewind a chat. Three-dot menu → Rewind to message. Rolls the chat back to a prior message; everything after is dropped.
  • Export all chats. Settings → Account → Download Data. Emails you a ZIP of every chat on the account (GDPR export). Takes 24–72 hours.

The cleanest way to think about it: Character.AI treats chat permanence the way Snapchat treats messages. Deletion is permanent, “save” is cloud archive, and the only real download path is the GDPR export — which works, but it's slow, and the ZIP format is rough to read.

What's the Deal With the Filter and Safe Mode on Character.AI?

The filter on Character.AI is a server-side moderation layer that blocks explicit sexual content, graphic violence, and some emotional-intensity scenes — and you cannot turn it off at the account level. It runs on every response the model generates, before the response reaches your screen.

There is no global off toggle. Per-character moderation sliders exist for explicit content, violence, sexual content, and tone, but those adjust behavior within the filter's allowed range; they don't disable moderation itself. Safe Mode is not a separate toggle you flip. It's the baseline.

The filter got tighter in late 2024 after a wave of regulatory pressure and teen-safety lawsuits, and the platform's monthly active count fell from about 28 million at the mid-2024 peak to roughly 20 million by January 2025 — a drop that tracked closely with the moderation overhaul.

One teen-survey study put specifically at 5.4% the share of teens who reduced or quit Character.AI because responses became “too censored” after the content-filter updates.

What actually trips the filter is where beginners get blindsided, because it isn't only explicit content. People report filter hits on non-explicit romantic scenes, fantasy-violence scenes (sword fights, battles), grief and trauma scenes in serious storytelling, moral-ambiguity scenes, and conversations the model misreads as unsafe for reasons no one can fully predict.

When we tested Character.AI in April 2026, the filter triggered on emotional roleplay that had nothing to do with explicit content — a scene about a character visiting a dying parent got interrupted mid-response.

Some people hit the filter wall, realize Character.AI's content policy isn't a fit for what they want to build, and start looking elsewhere. That's a legitimate decision, not a failure — different tools exist for different jobs.

Two alternatives worth naming honestly: Janitor AI is community-driven and lets you bring your own model through an API, which changes the filter footprint entirely. The other is ourdream.ai — a creator-first AI roleplay platform with no NSFW restrictions (no minors, no deepfakes, no lookalikes of real people), which means scenes go where you take the story without mid-scene censorship. It also ships a four-layer memory system that carries backstory across sessions, which addresses the other thing Character.AI beginners complain about alongside the filter.

Why Does My Character.AI Bot Keep Repeating Itself or Breaking Character?

Your Character.AI bot keeps repeating itself or breaking character because the platform runs on roughly a 3,000-token context window — about 2,000 tokens usable after system prompts — so anything older than about 20 to 30 messages silently falls out of the bot's memory.

This isn't a bug you can patch around with a prompt; it's the shape of the model. The Definition and greeting live in a semi-permanent slot, the current conversation scrolls through the context window, and whatever falls off the end is gone unless you've pinned it somewhere the model still sees.

When we tested Character.AI in April 2026, memory degraded noticeably after extended sessions — our character forgot details we'd established 20 messages earlier, including the persona's name and a core personality trait we'd set in the greeting.

Five fixes, in rough order of effort-to-payoff:

  1. Pin a Chat Memory. The 400-character Chat Memory box, free for everyone since May 2025, is the single biggest operational fix. Put the two or three facts you keep having to remind the bot about.
  2. Rewrite the greeting. The greeting is the highest-priority memory slot. Revising it mid-chat updates the “prime directive” the bot references first.
  3. Use OOC notes. “OOC: you're forgetting my character is left-handed” is the fastest in-scene correction. The model treats OOC tags as high-priority direction and adjusts on the next response.
  4. Regenerate sparingly. Rating a bad response and regenerating works once or twice; on the third try the model is usually in a degenerate loop. When that happens, rewind to the message before the loop started and change your own input instead of asking for a fifth reroll.
  5. On c.ai+, use the bigger persona box. Your Persona expands from 750 characters to 2,250 — about three times the context — and Auto-Memories pulls facts from your chats automatically.

What Do I Do When Character.AI Breaks?

When Character.AI breaks, it's almost always one of five problems — slowness, a silent outage, email spam, a stuck login, or a cache issue — and all five have fixes that take under a minute.

  • Character.AI is slow / replies are taking forever. Peak-hour load (heaviest 7–11pm ET); refresh the chat, try a different network, or check status if persistent for 15+ minutes. Plus subscribers get a priority queue.
  • “Is Character.AI down today?” Check downdetector.com/status/character-ai and the Character.AI X / Twitter account for real-time status.
  • Character.AI keeps emailing me daily. Settings → Notifications → unsubscribe from each category (daily digest, new characters, suggested bots). Changes apply within a few minutes.
  • Can't log back in / login loop. Clear cookies for character.ai in your browser; on mobile, log out and then reinstall the app. If you used Google/Apple signin, sign out of Google/Apple and back in.
  • Chat pages are blank / won't load. Clear site cache (browser → privacy settings) or force-close and reopen the app.

Two honest caveats: full-screen ads interrupting chats on the free tier are a known annoyance — they show up mid-conversation and there's no account-level toggle to stop them, only the Plus upgrade. Character.AI's Google Play rating sits at about 3.3 stars across more than 2 million reviews; most complaint clusters are about filters, ads, and memory rather than outright stability.

What Should I Know Before I Keep Using Character.AI?

Before you keep using Character.AI, know that the platform rewards persistence more than it rewards polish — the bots are easy to start and hard to master, and most of what beginners call “bugs” are actually the shape of the product.

Signup is a minute. The depth is the game. Only about 13–18% of people stick around at the 30-day mark, meaning 82–87% churn in the first month; the ones who stay tend to be the ones who learned roleplay formatting, memory management, and the filter's boundaries in week one and then treated week two as the actual starting line.

The honest advice on how to use Character.AI well: treat your first week as orientation, not evaluation. The bot that feels shallow on day one is usually a bot you haven't taught yet — the greeting hasn't been tuned, the Persona is blank, the Chat Memory box is empty, and you're judging a model with half its context window empty. Fix those four things and the same bot feels like a different product.

FAQ

Is Character.AI free?

→

Free for chat, character creation, voice calls, and image attachments, yes — with some caps. The free tier lets you chat as much as you want, create characters, and upload up to five images per day in chat. Character.AI Plus (c.ai+) runs $9.99 per month or $94.99 per year and unlocks priority response queue, unlimited image uploads, a 3x-larger Persona box (2,250 vs 750 characters), Auto-Memories that pull facts from your chats automatically, early feature access, and the ability to share group-chat invite links.

Do I need an account to use Character.AI?

→

No — not to browse. You can open the homepage and read public character pages without signing in. But to send a message, save a chat, or build your own character, you’ll need an account. Signup takes about 30 seconds.

Is Character.AI safe for teens?

→

That depends on what you mean by safe. About 9% of U.S. teens aged 13–17 have used Character.AI specifically, per a Pew Research Center survey of 1,458 teens. Under-18 accounts run on a more restricted version of the app — group chats disabled, stronger moderation, limits on some roleplay depths. But no AI filter catches everything, and companionship-oriented conversations are extremely common. For teens specifically, honest conversation with a parent or guardian matters more than any filter setting.

Are my Character.AI chats private? Can anyone else see them?

→

Yes — your chats are private by default. Character.AI stores them server-side (not end-to-end encrypted), but they aren’t visible to other users. The exception is if you use the Share button, which creates a public read-only link anyone can open. Character.AI’s trust-and-safety team can also access chats for moderation, abuse review, and legal compliance.

Can I see other people’s chats on Character.AI?

→

No. Individual chats are private to their user. You can see a character’s public greeting and who created it, but not any conversations other people have had with it.

How do I block or report a character on Character.AI?

→

Tap the character’s profile, open the three-dot menu, and pick Report. That opens the moderation form where you select the reason — harassment, inappropriate content, impersonation, and so on. You can also Block the character from the same menu, which hides them from your home feed and chat history. Reports are reviewed by Character.AI’s trust and safety team.

How do I stop Character.AI from sending me emails?

→

Go to Settings → Notifications and toggle off each email category (daily digest, new suggested characters, platform updates, marketing). Or click the unsubscribe link at the bottom of any Character.AI email. Changes apply within a few minutes. New accounts have most of these on by default, which is why the inbox fills up fast.

How do I delete my Character.AI account?

→

Go to Settings → Account → Delete Account. You’ll be asked to confirm, and the deletion is permanent — your characters, chats, and data are removed within 30 days. If you just want a break, you can log out and reinstall later; the account itself persists until you explicitly delete it.

How do I clear the Character.AI cache?

→

On web: clear cookies and site data for character.ai in your browser. In Chrome, that’s Settings → Privacy and Security → Cookies → See all site data → search character.ai → Delete. On mobile: uninstall and reinstall the app, or go to Settings → Apps → Character.AI → Storage → Clear Cache.

Why is Character.AI so slow, and how do I know if it’s down?

→

Peak hours (roughly 7–11pm US Eastern) regularly slow things down for free users; Plus subscribers get priority access and feel less of it. If the app is unresponsive for 15 minutes or more, check downdetector.com/status/character-ai or the Character.AI X account for real-time status. Most outages resolve within an hour. If it’s only slow for you, refreshing the chat or switching networks usually fixes it.

How do I log back into Character.AI if I can’t get in?

→

Clear cookies for character.ai first, or reinstall the mobile app — most login loops are corrupt-session bugs and clear up immediately. If that doesn’t work and you used Google or Apple signin, check that your auth provider is logged in (signing out of Google and back in often fixes it). Password resets live in Settings → Account → Reset Password.

How do I save or download a Character.AI chat?

→

There’s no one-click download button — chats live in Character.AI’s cloud. You have three options: archive the chat to preserve it inside your account (three-dot menu → Archive); share to generate a public read-only link; or request a full GDPR data export via Settings → Account → Download Data, which emails you a ZIP of every chat on the account within 24–72 hours.

How do I unarchive or unhide a Character.AI chat?

→

Tap your profile → Archived Chats → open the chat → tap Unarchive. The chat returns to your active list in the state it was in when you archived it.

How do I undo a rewind on Character.AI?

→

You can’t. Rewinds are permanent — once you roll back, the messages after the rewind point are gone for good. Plan rewinds carefully; if you’re experimenting with alternative replies, regenerate a single message instead.

How do I send a picture in a Character.AI chat?

→

Tap the camera or paperclip icon next to the text box, then upload from your camera roll or take a new photo. Free users get five image uploads per day; c.ai+ subscribers get unlimited. Some characters also support in-conversation image generation — the bot will respond with an AI-rendered image when you ask for one, if the character has that capability enabled.

How do I turn on dark mode on Character.AI?

→

Go to Settings → Appearance → Dark Mode. On mobile, Character.AI also follows your OS theme by default, so if your phone is already in dark mode, the app usually is too.

How do I remix or copy a character on Character.AI?

→

Open the character’s profile, tap the three-dot menu, and pick Remix. That creates a new character in your account that inherits the original’s Description and Greeting, and you can then edit any field. The original creator is credited on your remix, and remix rights respect the original character’s visibility settings — private characters can’t be remixed.

How do I import a Character.AI character into Janitor AI?

→

There’s no official one-click import between Character.AI and Janitor AI — different platforms, different formats. The common workaround: open the Character.AI character’s public page, copy the Description, Greeting, and any visible example dialogue, then on Janitor AI create a new character and paste the content into the corresponding fields. Pick a model (Janitor AI lets you bring your own via API). Quality varies because Character.AI’s model behavior doesn’t transfer — only the character’s written definition does.

Can I use Character.AI on a school Chromebook?

→

Technically yes — Character.AI runs in any Chrome browser. But many school networks block character.ai at the DNS level or through content filters. We don’t teach how to bypass school network policies. If your school blocks it, use the platform on personal WiFi at home. No VPN or DNS tricks here.

What’s the difference between Character.AI and ChatGPT?

→

Different tools for different jobs. ChatGPT is a general-purpose assistant — it writes code, summarizes documents, answers factual questions. Character.AI is a roleplay and companionship platform — people spend about 17 minutes 23 seconds per session on average versus ChatGPT’s roughly 7-minute average, because the use case is immersion, not task completion. Character.AI has community-built characters with personality and persistent context; ChatGPT has built-in web search, tools, and enterprise integrations.

Where to Start

Character.AI is easy to open and hard to master. Treat your first week as the tutorial level — learn the formatting, pin a Chat Memory, fill out your Persona, rewrite the greeting on a bot that feels flat — and by week three the same platform feels like a different product.

If the filter keeps ending scenes you cared about, or the memory keeps dropping details that matter, the honest answer is that a different platform may fit better. For unrestricted roleplay with a four-layer memory system that carries backstory across sessions, try ourdream.ai.

No credit card, no filter walls — just the conversation you actually wanted to have.

Table of contents

  • Is Character.AI Hard to Use?
  • What Is Character.AI?
  • How Do I Sign Up?
  • How Do I Chat With a Character?
  • How Do I Roleplay?
  • How Do I Create a Character?
  • Scenes, Voice Calls, and Group Chats
  • Save, Share, or Delete a Chat
  • The Filter and Safe Mode
  • Repeating or Forgetting Bots
  • When Character.AI Breaks
  • What to Know Before You Keep Going
  • FAQ
  • Where to Start
Start now
Share

get started with
ourdream.ai

where will your imagination take you?

Try it now

Related Articles

Browse All →
ourdream vs candy.ai

ourdream vs candy.ai

sweeter than candy?

Read full article →

ourdream vs GirlfriendGPT

ourdream vs GirlfriendGPT

Which AI companion actually remembers you?

Read full article →

ourdream vs JuicyChat

ourdream vs JuicyChat

Comparing content freedom and image quality.

Read full article →

ourdream vs SpicyChat

ourdream vs SpicyChat

How does SpicyChat stack up against ourdream?

Read full article →

Home/Guides/How to Use Character.AI: A Complete Beginner's Walkthrough

How to Use Character.AI: A Complete Beginner's Walkthrough

Insights | Updated on April 20, 2026

By Lizzie Od, Editor & AI Roleplay Enthusiast

How to use Character.AI
Ask AI for a summary
ClaudeGeminiGrokChatGPTPerplexity

TL;DR:

Character.AI takes under a minute to sign up for and start chatting with — the hard parts are the features that sit underneath the chat box. Here's what this guide covers, end to end:

  • Signup (web, iOS, Android) and what you can do without an account
  • Sending your first message, editing, rewinding, and attaching images
  • Roleplay formatting — *action*, “dialogue”, narration, and OOC notes
  • Building your own character (Quick Mode vs Advanced Mode), Personas, and {{char}} / {{user}} variables
  • Scenes, voice calls, group chats, and saving / sharing / deleting chats
  • The filter, memory drift, and a 20-entry FAQ that covers the long tail

Character.AI has the strange distinction of being the first AI chatbot most people under 25 ever use, and the first one they get genuinely frustrated by.

The average session runs about 17 minutes and 23 seconds — more than double ChatGPT's seven-minute average — and the platform pulls roughly 92 minutes per day per active user, which is the kind of stickiness that only happens when the product is both fun and slightly broken in interesting ways.

Is Character.AI Hard to Use?

No, Character.AI is not hard to use — the signup flow is under a minute and sending your first message takes another few seconds.

The part that takes longer is everything underneath the chat box: the formatting conventions that make roleplay bots play along, the memory quirks that kick in around message twenty, and the content filter that stops some scenes cold without warning. None of that is rocket science. It's just under-documented, and beginners usually figure it out by bouncing off the rough edges.

Where beginners actually get stuck:

  • Formatting a roleplay scene so the bot plays along instead of narrating around you
  • Making the character remember earlier beats (names, plot, personality) across a long chat
  • Figuring out what the filter blocks, why it blocks it, and what's legitimately available when Character.AI isn't the right fit

What Is Character.AI, in One Paragraph?

Character.AI is an AI chat platform where you talk to — and build — characters, from fictional crushes to study tutors to historical figures.

As of early 2025 it counted roughly 20 million monthly active users, down from a 28M peak in mid-2024. The creation side has scaled harder than the chat side: more than 18 million user-created characters sit on the platform now, with about 9 million new ones created every month.

Around 53% of the audience is 18–24, and male/female traffic is close to even — which is why the interface feels tuned for roleplay and fandom more than productivity.

How Do I Sign Up for Character.AI?

Signing up for Character.AI takes under a minute on web, iOS, or Android — here's the fastest path. There is no waitlist, no invite code, no credit card step. The only thing the platform checks is your date of birth, because under-18 accounts run on a restricted version of the app (no group chats, tighter moderation, fewer roleplay depths).

  1. Go to character.ai in any browser, or install the Character.AI app from the App Store or Google Play. Yes, there's a mobile app for both platforms — some features (group chats) are mobile-only; others (Scenes deep-editing) are easier on desktop.
  2. Tap Sign Up in the top-right.
  3. Continue with Google, Apple, or email. Email signup asks for a username and password; Google/Apple signup uses whatever account you're already signed into.
  4. Confirm your date of birth. This gates group chats and some content; the platform does not let you edit this later without contacting support, so enter it correctly the first time.

How Do I Use Character.AI Without an Account?

You can browse the homepage, open character profiles, and read public greetings without signing in. What you can't do without an account: send a message, save a chat, create a character, or use voice calls. The pre-signup view is essentially a read-only storefront — useful for scanning whether the platform has bots you're interested in before committing 30 seconds to an email signup.

How Do I Chat With a Character?

You chat with a Character.AI character by picking one from the homepage, typing in the text box at the bottom, and hitting send — the bot replies in a few seconds and you keep going from there.

The chat screen looks about like you'd expect: the character's portrait and name sit at the top, a scrollable message thread fills the middle, and a text box with a send button and a camera icon sits at the bottom. Each message in the thread has a small row of action icons — edit, regenerate, rewind, and a star rating — that most beginners don't discover for a day or two.

  1. Browse Featured, For You, or the search bar — the fastest way in is typing a fandom name (a show, a game, a book) and seeing what comes up. Most of the interesting chats live in fan-built characters, not the small roster the company made themselves.
  2. Tap the character card to open the chat screen. Every character has a greeting that auto-populates as the first message.
  3. Type your first reply in the text box and hit send. Most conversations start with a greeting or a short scene-setting line; “Hey” works, but “You find me reading in the corner of the library, looking up as you sit down” works better when you want the bot to commit to a scene.
  4. Use the icons on each message to manage responses — edit to rewrite your own message, regenerate to ask the bot for a new reply to the same prompt, rewind to roll the chat back a turn, and the star icon to rate a response.

One practical note on the icons: rewind is permanent — once you roll back, the responses after the rewind point are gone for good. Regenerate is how you ask for a second attempt without losing the thread. And the star rating actually does something; Character.AI uses per-person ratings to tune which responses surface first. If you hate a reply, rate it down before regenerating.

Free accounts also get five image uploads per day in chat (camera icon next to the text box), while c.ai+ subscribers get unlimited.

How Do I Roleplay on Character.AI?

You roleplay on Character.AI by wrapping actions in asterisks, putting dialogue in quotes, and writing narration as plain text — the bot mirrors whatever formatting you set in your first few turns.

The model doesn't read a formatting rulebook. It pattern-matches. Whatever you do in the first three to five messages, the bot copies. Set a clear format early and the rest of the scene usually holds; switch halfway through and expect confusion.

The four conventions that matter:

  1. Actions in asterisks. *leans against the doorway* — the bot will mirror with its own *matches your stance, arms crossed* style actions. Asterisks are the universal tell that “this is a physical beat, not speech.”
  2. Dialogue in quotes. “You're late.” — quotes keep character speech visually distinct from narration. Some writers also use em dashes (— You're late.), but quotes are the cleaner pattern match.
  3. Narration in plain text. Plain sentences handle scene-setting and passage of time. The bot treats plain text as stage directions and continues the scene in the same register.
  4. OOC notes for direction. Prefix with OOC: (out of character) to step out of the scene and give the bot a note without breaking immersion inside the story. This is the single most useful roleplay tool most beginners never use.

What breaks the scene:

  • Switching formatting halfway through a chat. The bot starts mixing styles and the scene goes fuzzy.
  • Dropping all context and pasting a one-line prompt. The bot loses the thread it was mirroring.
  • The content filter interrupting scenes that trip its moderation layer, which we'll get to in a minute.

Roughly 93% of people who've had a Character.AI chat have had at least one companionship-oriented conversation, so if you're here to flirt with a character — you're in extremely well-populated company. The formatting that works for flirting is the same as for any other scene: establish the vibe in the first three turns, the bot mirrors it. We don't publish jailbreaks or filter workarounds; most of them stop working within a week anyway because the model retrains on the exact prompts being shared.

How Do I Create My Own Character on Character.AI?

You create a character on Character.AI by opening the Create menu, choosing Quick Mode for a fast build or Advanced Mode for a full persona, and filling out a 6-step wizard — name, tagline, avatar, greeting, description/definition, and visibility.

Quick Mode is for simple bots you want talking in under two minutes. Advanced Mode opens up the Definition box (long-form backstory and example dialogue), Custom Definitions, and the Character Book, which is where serious character-builders spend their time.

The 6-step walkthrough:

  1. Open Create → Character. The Create button lives in the top-right on web (plus-icon) or behind the three-line menu on mobile. You'll see a choice between Character, Scene, and Persona.
  2. Pick Quick or Advanced Mode. Quick asks you for the basics in one short form; Advanced layers on Definition + example dialogue + Custom Definitions.
  3. Name, tagline, and avatar. Name is what appears at the top of the chat screen. Tagline is the one-line hook shown in search. Avatar can be uploaded (any square image) or generated in-app via the AI profile image tool.
  4. Greeting. This is the bot's first message to every person who opens the chat, so it's also the highest-priority memory slot the model references. A good greeting establishes the scene, the bot's voice, and an opening beat.
  5. Description and Definition. Use {{char}} to refer to the bot and {{user}} to refer to whoever is chatting; both template variables render correctly per-person. Lead the Definition with hard facts, not fluff — the model remembers what comes first.
  6. Visibility. Private keeps the character yours alone; Unlisted makes it shareable by direct link; Public lists it in search and the explore feeds. Changing visibility later is a single tap — start Private when you're iterating, switch to Public once it's ready.

What Is a Persona on Character.AI?

A Persona is your side of the chat — how the bot addresses you and what it knows about you by default. Instead of re-explaining who you are to every new bot, you fill in a Persona once (name, basic backstory, preferences, quirks) and it travels across chats.

Free accounts get a 750-character Persona box; c.ai+ subscribers get 2,250 characters — three times the context — which materially reduces memory drift on long chats.

How Do I Make My Character More Accurate?

To make your Character.AI more accurate, the short version is: lead with facts, use example messages, and pin the things that keep slipping. Three moves that actually work:

  • Front-load the Definition with hard facts. The model weights early tokens more heavily. Put the character's core traits (occupation, primary trait, speech quirk, one relationship) in the first paragraph. The fluffy backstory goes later.
  • Use example messages in Advanced Mode. Two or three example exchanges between {{user}} and {{char}} teach the model your tone better than any adjective list.
  • Pin a Chat Memory. Since May 2025, every free account gets a 400-character Chat Memory box per chat — a fixed memory slot that does not get pushed out of the context window. Put the two or three facts you keep having to remind the bot about in there.

How Do I Use Scenes, Voice Calls, and Group Chats?

Character.AI ships three features that sit on top of basic chat — Scenes for pre-configured roleplay setups, Voice Calls for real-time spoken conversation, and Group Chats for multi-character rooms.

Each one has its own quirks; none of them require c.ai+ to open (though group-chat invite-link sharing is Plus-gated), and all three work on mobile. Voice and Scenes also work on desktop. Group chats don't.

How Do I Create a Scene on Character.AI?

You create a Scene on Character.AI by opening Create → Scene, picking either “Any Character Scene” or one tied to a specific character, then filling in the setup. Scenes are a faster way to start structured roleplay without building a whole new bot.

  1. Tap Create → Scene from the main menu.
  2. Pick Any Character Scene for flexible role dynamics where any bot can drop in, or tie the Scene to a specific character you've built or starred.
  3. Fill in the setup — location, stakes, opening beat. This is the pre-loaded context the bot reads before the first message, so the more vivid and specific the setup, the more the scene holds shape.

For the full Scene customization surface — complex role dynamics, multi-beat setups, branching — see Character.AI's Scene Creation Quickstart Guide. The in-app version teaches the basics; the support guide covers the advanced territory.

How Do I Use Voice Calls on Character.AI?

You start a voice call on Character.AI by opening any 1:1 chat and tapping the phone icon — voice calls are free for everyone on mobile and desktop, but not available in group chats.

  1. Open any 1:1 chat with a character.
  2. Tap the phone icon in the top-right of the chat screen.
  3. Pick a voice from the library — or record/upload your own via Voice Lab. Voice Lab accepts short uploaded samples and generates a custom voice you can then assign to any bot you've built.

Voice calls count as chat turns under the hood, which means the same memory rules apply. If a call gets long and the bot starts going sideways, drop to text for a message or two, use OOC to reset context, then go back to voice.

How Do I Use Group Chats on Character.AI?

You start a group chat on Character.AI in the mobile app — open Chat → New Room, add up to 10 AI characters, and optionally add up to 10 human friends. Group chats are mobile-only (they do not work on web), and sharing the invite link to bring other humans in requires c.ai+.

  1. In the mobile app, open the chat menu and pick New Room (sometimes labeled Group Chat).
  2. Add up to 10 AI characters. This is also how you make two characters talk to each other — throw both bots in a room, send a scene-setting message, and let them respond in turn.
  3. Add up to 10 human friends. The room holds 20 participants total (10 AI + 10 humans). Sharing an invite link to a group chat requires c.ai+; inviting friends who are already in your followers list is free.

How Do I Save, Share, or Delete a Character.AI Chat?

You save, share, or delete a Character.AI chat by opening the three-dot menu on any chat — each action is one tap, but chats live in the cloud, not locally, so “save” means archive or export rather than download-to-file.

This is the single most-missed detail on the platform: there's no native download button, and deleting a chat is permanent. No undo.

  • Save / keep a chat. Three-dot menu → Archive. Chat is hidden from your active list but preserved; retrievable from the Archived Chats view.
  • Unarchive a chat. Archived Chats → tap chat → Unarchive.
  • Share a chat. Three-dot menu → Share link. Generates a public URL — anyone with the link can read, not edit.
  • Delete a chat. Three-dot menu → Delete. Permanent. No undo.
  • Rewind a chat. Three-dot menu → Rewind to message. Rolls the chat back to a prior message; everything after is dropped.
  • Export all chats. Settings → Account → Download Data. Emails you a ZIP of every chat on the account (GDPR export). Takes 24–72 hours.

The cleanest way to think about it: Character.AI treats chat permanence the way Snapchat treats messages. Deletion is permanent, “save” is cloud archive, and the only real download path is the GDPR export — which works, but it's slow, and the ZIP format is rough to read.

What's the Deal With the Filter and Safe Mode on Character.AI?

The filter on Character.AI is a server-side moderation layer that blocks explicit sexual content, graphic violence, and some emotional-intensity scenes — and you cannot turn it off at the account level. It runs on every response the model generates, before the response reaches your screen.

There is no global off toggle. Per-character moderation sliders exist for explicit content, violence, sexual content, and tone, but those adjust behavior within the filter's allowed range; they don't disable moderation itself. Safe Mode is not a separate toggle you flip. It's the baseline.

The filter got tighter in late 2024 after a wave of regulatory pressure and teen-safety lawsuits, and the platform's monthly active count fell from about 28 million at the mid-2024 peak to roughly 20 million by January 2025 — a drop that tracked closely with the moderation overhaul.

One teen-survey study put specifically at 5.4% the share of teens who reduced or quit Character.AI because responses became “too censored” after the content-filter updates.

What actually trips the filter is where beginners get blindsided, because it isn't only explicit content. People report filter hits on non-explicit romantic scenes, fantasy-violence scenes (sword fights, battles), grief and trauma scenes in serious storytelling, moral-ambiguity scenes, and conversations the model misreads as unsafe for reasons no one can fully predict.

When we tested Character.AI in April 2026, the filter triggered on emotional roleplay that had nothing to do with explicit content — a scene about a character visiting a dying parent got interrupted mid-response.

Some people hit the filter wall, realize Character.AI's content policy isn't a fit for what they want to build, and start looking elsewhere. That's a legitimate decision, not a failure — different tools exist for different jobs.

Two alternatives worth naming honestly: Janitor AI is community-driven and lets you bring your own model through an API, which changes the filter footprint entirely. The other is ourdream.ai — a creator-first AI roleplay platform with no NSFW restrictions (no minors, no deepfakes, no lookalikes of real people), which means scenes go where you take the story without mid-scene censorship. It also ships a four-layer memory system that carries backstory across sessions, which addresses the other thing Character.AI beginners complain about alongside the filter.

Why Does My Character.AI Bot Keep Repeating Itself or Breaking Character?

Your Character.AI bot keeps repeating itself or breaking character because the platform runs on roughly a 3,000-token context window — about 2,000 tokens usable after system prompts — so anything older than about 20 to 30 messages silently falls out of the bot's memory.

This isn't a bug you can patch around with a prompt; it's the shape of the model. The Definition and greeting live in a semi-permanent slot, the current conversation scrolls through the context window, and whatever falls off the end is gone unless you've pinned it somewhere the model still sees.

When we tested Character.AI in April 2026, memory degraded noticeably after extended sessions — our character forgot details we'd established 20 messages earlier, including the persona's name and a core personality trait we'd set in the greeting.

Five fixes, in rough order of effort-to-payoff:

  1. Pin a Chat Memory. The 400-character Chat Memory box, free for everyone since May 2025, is the single biggest operational fix. Put the two or three facts you keep having to remind the bot about.
  2. Rewrite the greeting. The greeting is the highest-priority memory slot. Revising it mid-chat updates the “prime directive” the bot references first.
  3. Use OOC notes. “OOC: you're forgetting my character is left-handed” is the fastest in-scene correction. The model treats OOC tags as high-priority direction and adjusts on the next response.
  4. Regenerate sparingly. Rating a bad response and regenerating works once or twice; on the third try the model is usually in a degenerate loop. When that happens, rewind to the message before the loop started and change your own input instead of asking for a fifth reroll.
  5. On c.ai+, use the bigger persona box. Your Persona expands from 750 characters to 2,250 — about three times the context — and Auto-Memories pulls facts from your chats automatically.

What Do I Do When Character.AI Breaks?

When Character.AI breaks, it's almost always one of five problems — slowness, a silent outage, email spam, a stuck login, or a cache issue — and all five have fixes that take under a minute.

  • Character.AI is slow / replies are taking forever. Peak-hour load (heaviest 7–11pm ET); refresh the chat, try a different network, or check status if persistent for 15+ minutes. Plus subscribers get a priority queue.
  • “Is Character.AI down today?” Check downdetector.com/status/character-ai and the Character.AI X / Twitter account for real-time status.
  • Character.AI keeps emailing me daily. Settings → Notifications → unsubscribe from each category (daily digest, new characters, suggested bots). Changes apply within a few minutes.
  • Can't log back in / login loop. Clear cookies for character.ai in your browser; on mobile, log out and then reinstall the app. If you used Google/Apple signin, sign out of Google/Apple and back in.
  • Chat pages are blank / won't load. Clear site cache (browser → privacy settings) or force-close and reopen the app.

Two honest caveats: full-screen ads interrupting chats on the free tier are a known annoyance — they show up mid-conversation and there's no account-level toggle to stop them, only the Plus upgrade. Character.AI's Google Play rating sits at about 3.3 stars across more than 2 million reviews; most complaint clusters are about filters, ads, and memory rather than outright stability.

What Should I Know Before I Keep Using Character.AI?

Before you keep using Character.AI, know that the platform rewards persistence more than it rewards polish — the bots are easy to start and hard to master, and most of what beginners call “bugs” are actually the shape of the product.

Signup is a minute. The depth is the game. Only about 13–18% of people stick around at the 30-day mark, meaning 82–87% churn in the first month; the ones who stay tend to be the ones who learned roleplay formatting, memory management, and the filter's boundaries in week one and then treated week two as the actual starting line.

The honest advice on how to use Character.AI well: treat your first week as orientation, not evaluation. The bot that feels shallow on day one is usually a bot you haven't taught yet — the greeting hasn't been tuned, the Persona is blank, the Chat Memory box is empty, and you're judging a model with half its context window empty. Fix those four things and the same bot feels like a different product.

FAQ

Is Character.AI free?

→

Free for chat, character creation, voice calls, and image attachments, yes — with some caps. The free tier lets you chat as much as you want, create characters, and upload up to five images per day in chat. Character.AI Plus (c.ai+) runs $9.99 per month or $94.99 per year and unlocks priority response queue, unlimited image uploads, a 3x-larger Persona box (2,250 vs 750 characters), Auto-Memories that pull facts from your chats automatically, early feature access, and the ability to share group-chat invite links.

Do I need an account to use Character.AI?

→

No — not to browse. You can open the homepage and read public character pages without signing in. But to send a message, save a chat, or build your own character, you’ll need an account. Signup takes about 30 seconds.

Is Character.AI safe for teens?

→

That depends on what you mean by safe. About 9% of U.S. teens aged 13–17 have used Character.AI specifically, per a Pew Research Center survey of 1,458 teens. Under-18 accounts run on a more restricted version of the app — group chats disabled, stronger moderation, limits on some roleplay depths. But no AI filter catches everything, and companionship-oriented conversations are extremely common. For teens specifically, honest conversation with a parent or guardian matters more than any filter setting.

Are my Character.AI chats private? Can anyone else see them?

→

Yes — your chats are private by default. Character.AI stores them server-side (not end-to-end encrypted), but they aren’t visible to other users. The exception is if you use the Share button, which creates a public read-only link anyone can open. Character.AI’s trust-and-safety team can also access chats for moderation, abuse review, and legal compliance.

Can I see other people’s chats on Character.AI?

→

No. Individual chats are private to their user. You can see a character’s public greeting and who created it, but not any conversations other people have had with it.

How do I block or report a character on Character.AI?

→

Tap the character’s profile, open the three-dot menu, and pick Report. That opens the moderation form where you select the reason — harassment, inappropriate content, impersonation, and so on. You can also Block the character from the same menu, which hides them from your home feed and chat history. Reports are reviewed by Character.AI’s trust and safety team.

How do I stop Character.AI from sending me emails?

→

Go to Settings → Notifications and toggle off each email category (daily digest, new suggested characters, platform updates, marketing). Or click the unsubscribe link at the bottom of any Character.AI email. Changes apply within a few minutes. New accounts have most of these on by default, which is why the inbox fills up fast.

How do I delete my Character.AI account?

→

Go to Settings → Account → Delete Account. You’ll be asked to confirm, and the deletion is permanent — your characters, chats, and data are removed within 30 days. If you just want a break, you can log out and reinstall later; the account itself persists until you explicitly delete it.

How do I clear the Character.AI cache?

→

On web: clear cookies and site data for character.ai in your browser. In Chrome, that’s Settings → Privacy and Security → Cookies → See all site data → search character.ai → Delete. On mobile: uninstall and reinstall the app, or go to Settings → Apps → Character.AI → Storage → Clear Cache.

Why is Character.AI so slow, and how do I know if it’s down?

→

Peak hours (roughly 7–11pm US Eastern) regularly slow things down for free users; Plus subscribers get priority access and feel less of it. If the app is unresponsive for 15 minutes or more, check downdetector.com/status/character-ai or the Character.AI X account for real-time status. Most outages resolve within an hour. If it’s only slow for you, refreshing the chat or switching networks usually fixes it.

How do I log back into Character.AI if I can’t get in?

→

Clear cookies for character.ai first, or reinstall the mobile app — most login loops are corrupt-session bugs and clear up immediately. If that doesn’t work and you used Google or Apple signin, check that your auth provider is logged in (signing out of Google and back in often fixes it). Password resets live in Settings → Account → Reset Password.

How do I save or download a Character.AI chat?

→

There’s no one-click download button — chats live in Character.AI’s cloud. You have three options: archive the chat to preserve it inside your account (three-dot menu → Archive); share to generate a public read-only link; or request a full GDPR data export via Settings → Account → Download Data, which emails you a ZIP of every chat on the account within 24–72 hours.

How do I unarchive or unhide a Character.AI chat?

→

Tap your profile → Archived Chats → open the chat → tap Unarchive. The chat returns to your active list in the state it was in when you archived it.

How do I undo a rewind on Character.AI?

→

You can’t. Rewinds are permanent — once you roll back, the messages after the rewind point are gone for good. Plan rewinds carefully; if you’re experimenting with alternative replies, regenerate a single message instead.

How do I send a picture in a Character.AI chat?

→

Tap the camera or paperclip icon next to the text box, then upload from your camera roll or take a new photo. Free users get five image uploads per day; c.ai+ subscribers get unlimited. Some characters also support in-conversation image generation — the bot will respond with an AI-rendered image when you ask for one, if the character has that capability enabled.

How do I turn on dark mode on Character.AI?

→

Go to Settings → Appearance → Dark Mode. On mobile, Character.AI also follows your OS theme by default, so if your phone is already in dark mode, the app usually is too.

How do I remix or copy a character on Character.AI?

→

Open the character’s profile, tap the three-dot menu, and pick Remix. That creates a new character in your account that inherits the original’s Description and Greeting, and you can then edit any field. The original creator is credited on your remix, and remix rights respect the original character’s visibility settings — private characters can’t be remixed.

How do I import a Character.AI character into Janitor AI?

→

There’s no official one-click import between Character.AI and Janitor AI — different platforms, different formats. The common workaround: open the Character.AI character’s public page, copy the Description, Greeting, and any visible example dialogue, then on Janitor AI create a new character and paste the content into the corresponding fields. Pick a model (Janitor AI lets you bring your own via API). Quality varies because Character.AI’s model behavior doesn’t transfer — only the character’s written definition does.

Can I use Character.AI on a school Chromebook?

→

Technically yes — Character.AI runs in any Chrome browser. But many school networks block character.ai at the DNS level or through content filters. We don’t teach how to bypass school network policies. If your school blocks it, use the platform on personal WiFi at home. No VPN or DNS tricks here.

What’s the difference between Character.AI and ChatGPT?

→

Different tools for different jobs. ChatGPT is a general-purpose assistant — it writes code, summarizes documents, answers factual questions. Character.AI is a roleplay and companionship platform — people spend about 17 minutes 23 seconds per session on average versus ChatGPT’s roughly 7-minute average, because the use case is immersion, not task completion. Character.AI has community-built characters with personality and persistent context; ChatGPT has built-in web search, tools, and enterprise integrations.

Where to Start

Character.AI is easy to open and hard to master. Treat your first week as the tutorial level — learn the formatting, pin a Chat Memory, fill out your Persona, rewrite the greeting on a bot that feels flat — and by week three the same platform feels like a different product.

If the filter keeps ending scenes you cared about, or the memory keeps dropping details that matter, the honest answer is that a different platform may fit better. For unrestricted roleplay with a four-layer memory system that carries backstory across sessions, try ourdream.ai.

No credit card, no filter walls — just the conversation you actually wanted to have.

Table of contents

  • Is Character.AI Hard to Use?
  • What Is Character.AI?
  • How Do I Sign Up?
  • How Do I Chat With a Character?
  • How Do I Roleplay?
  • How Do I Create a Character?
  • Scenes, Voice Calls, and Group Chats
  • Save, Share, or Delete a Chat
  • The Filter and Safe Mode
  • Repeating or Forgetting Bots
  • When Character.AI Breaks
  • What to Know Before You Keep Going
  • FAQ
  • Where to Start
Start now
Share

get started with
ourdream.ai

where will your imagination take you?

Try it now

Related Articles

Browse All →
ourdream vs candy.ai

ourdream vs candy.ai

sweeter than candy?

Read full article →

ourdream vs GirlfriendGPT

ourdream vs GirlfriendGPT

Which AI companion actually remembers you?

Read full article →

ourdream vs JuicyChat

ourdream vs JuicyChat

Comparing content freedom and image quality.

Read full article →

ourdream vs SpicyChat

ourdream vs SpicyChat

How does SpicyChat stack up against ourdream?

Read full article →

Home/Guides/How to Use Character.AI: A Complete Beginner's Walkthrough

How to Use Character.AI: A Complete Beginner's Walkthrough

Insights | Updated on April 20, 2026

By Lizzie Od, Editor & AI Roleplay Enthusiast

How to use Character.AI
Ask AI for a summary
ClaudeGeminiGrokChatGPTPerplexity

TL;DR:

Character.AI takes under a minute to sign up for and start chatting with — the hard parts are the features that sit underneath the chat box. Here's what this guide covers, end to end:

  • Signup (web, iOS, Android) and what you can do without an account
  • Sending your first message, editing, rewinding, and attaching images
  • Roleplay formatting — *action*, “dialogue”, narration, and OOC notes
  • Building your own character (Quick Mode vs Advanced Mode), Personas, and {{char}} / {{user}} variables
  • Scenes, voice calls, group chats, and saving / sharing / deleting chats
  • The filter, memory drift, and a 20-entry FAQ that covers the long tail

Character.AI has the strange distinction of being the first AI chatbot most people under 25 ever use, and the first one they get genuinely frustrated by.

The average session runs about 17 minutes and 23 seconds — more than double ChatGPT's seven-minute average — and the platform pulls roughly 92 minutes per day per active user, which is the kind of stickiness that only happens when the product is both fun and slightly broken in interesting ways.

Is Character.AI Hard to Use?

No, Character.AI is not hard to use — the signup flow is under a minute and sending your first message takes another few seconds.

The part that takes longer is everything underneath the chat box: the formatting conventions that make roleplay bots play along, the memory quirks that kick in around message twenty, and the content filter that stops some scenes cold without warning. None of that is rocket science. It's just under-documented, and beginners usually figure it out by bouncing off the rough edges.

Where beginners actually get stuck:

  • Formatting a roleplay scene so the bot plays along instead of narrating around you
  • Making the character remember earlier beats (names, plot, personality) across a long chat
  • Figuring out what the filter blocks, why it blocks it, and what's legitimately available when Character.AI isn't the right fit

What Is Character.AI, in One Paragraph?

Character.AI is an AI chat platform where you talk to — and build — characters, from fictional crushes to study tutors to historical figures.

As of early 2025 it counted roughly 20 million monthly active users, down from a 28M peak in mid-2024. The creation side has scaled harder than the chat side: more than 18 million user-created characters sit on the platform now, with about 9 million new ones created every month.

Around 53% of the audience is 18–24, and male/female traffic is close to even — which is why the interface feels tuned for roleplay and fandom more than productivity.

How Do I Sign Up for Character.AI?

Signing up for Character.AI takes under a minute on web, iOS, or Android — here's the fastest path. There is no waitlist, no invite code, no credit card step. The only thing the platform checks is your date of birth, because under-18 accounts run on a restricted version of the app (no group chats, tighter moderation, fewer roleplay depths).

  1. Go to character.ai in any browser, or install the Character.AI app from the App Store or Google Play. Yes, there's a mobile app for both platforms — some features (group chats) are mobile-only; others (Scenes deep-editing) are easier on desktop.
  2. Tap Sign Up in the top-right.
  3. Continue with Google, Apple, or email. Email signup asks for a username and password; Google/Apple signup uses whatever account you're already signed into.
  4. Confirm your date of birth. This gates group chats and some content; the platform does not let you edit this later without contacting support, so enter it correctly the first time.

How Do I Use Character.AI Without an Account?

You can browse the homepage, open character profiles, and read public greetings without signing in. What you can't do without an account: send a message, save a chat, create a character, or use voice calls. The pre-signup view is essentially a read-only storefront — useful for scanning whether the platform has bots you're interested in before committing 30 seconds to an email signup.

How Do I Chat With a Character?

You chat with a Character.AI character by picking one from the homepage, typing in the text box at the bottom, and hitting send — the bot replies in a few seconds and you keep going from there.

The chat screen looks about like you'd expect: the character's portrait and name sit at the top, a scrollable message thread fills the middle, and a text box with a send button and a camera icon sits at the bottom. Each message in the thread has a small row of action icons — edit, regenerate, rewind, and a star rating — that most beginners don't discover for a day or two.

  1. Browse Featured, For You, or the search bar — the fastest way in is typing a fandom name (a show, a game, a book) and seeing what comes up. Most of the interesting chats live in fan-built characters, not the small roster the company made themselves.
  2. Tap the character card to open the chat screen. Every character has a greeting that auto-populates as the first message.
  3. Type your first reply in the text box and hit send. Most conversations start with a greeting or a short scene-setting line; “Hey” works, but “You find me reading in the corner of the library, looking up as you sit down” works better when you want the bot to commit to a scene.
  4. Use the icons on each message to manage responses — edit to rewrite your own message, regenerate to ask the bot for a new reply to the same prompt, rewind to roll the chat back a turn, and the star icon to rate a response.

One practical note on the icons: rewind is permanent — once you roll back, the responses after the rewind point are gone for good. Regenerate is how you ask for a second attempt without losing the thread. And the star rating actually does something; Character.AI uses per-person ratings to tune which responses surface first. If you hate a reply, rate it down before regenerating.

Free accounts also get five image uploads per day in chat (camera icon next to the text box), while c.ai+ subscribers get unlimited.

How Do I Roleplay on Character.AI?

You roleplay on Character.AI by wrapping actions in asterisks, putting dialogue in quotes, and writing narration as plain text — the bot mirrors whatever formatting you set in your first few turns.

The model doesn't read a formatting rulebook. It pattern-matches. Whatever you do in the first three to five messages, the bot copies. Set a clear format early and the rest of the scene usually holds; switch halfway through and expect confusion.

The four conventions that matter:

  1. Actions in asterisks. *leans against the doorway* — the bot will mirror with its own *matches your stance, arms crossed* style actions. Asterisks are the universal tell that “this is a physical beat, not speech.”
  2. Dialogue in quotes. “You're late.” — quotes keep character speech visually distinct from narration. Some writers also use em dashes (— You're late.), but quotes are the cleaner pattern match.
  3. Narration in plain text. Plain sentences handle scene-setting and passage of time. The bot treats plain text as stage directions and continues the scene in the same register.
  4. OOC notes for direction. Prefix with OOC: (out of character) to step out of the scene and give the bot a note without breaking immersion inside the story. This is the single most useful roleplay tool most beginners never use.

What breaks the scene:

  • Switching formatting halfway through a chat. The bot starts mixing styles and the scene goes fuzzy.
  • Dropping all context and pasting a one-line prompt. The bot loses the thread it was mirroring.
  • The content filter interrupting scenes that trip its moderation layer, which we'll get to in a minute.

Roughly 93% of people who've had a Character.AI chat have had at least one companionship-oriented conversation, so if you're here to flirt with a character — you're in extremely well-populated company. The formatting that works for flirting is the same as for any other scene: establish the vibe in the first three turns, the bot mirrors it. We don't publish jailbreaks or filter workarounds; most of them stop working within a week anyway because the model retrains on the exact prompts being shared.

How Do I Create My Own Character on Character.AI?

You create a character on Character.AI by opening the Create menu, choosing Quick Mode for a fast build or Advanced Mode for a full persona, and filling out a 6-step wizard — name, tagline, avatar, greeting, description/definition, and visibility.

Quick Mode is for simple bots you want talking in under two minutes. Advanced Mode opens up the Definition box (long-form backstory and example dialogue), Custom Definitions, and the Character Book, which is where serious character-builders spend their time.

The 6-step walkthrough:

  1. Open Create → Character. The Create button lives in the top-right on web (plus-icon) or behind the three-line menu on mobile. You'll see a choice between Character, Scene, and Persona.
  2. Pick Quick or Advanced Mode. Quick asks you for the basics in one short form; Advanced layers on Definition + example dialogue + Custom Definitions.
  3. Name, tagline, and avatar. Name is what appears at the top of the chat screen. Tagline is the one-line hook shown in search. Avatar can be uploaded (any square image) or generated in-app via the AI profile image tool.
  4. Greeting. This is the bot's first message to every person who opens the chat, so it's also the highest-priority memory slot the model references. A good greeting establishes the scene, the bot's voice, and an opening beat.
  5. Description and Definition. Use {{char}} to refer to the bot and {{user}} to refer to whoever is chatting; both template variables render correctly per-person. Lead the Definition with hard facts, not fluff — the model remembers what comes first.
  6. Visibility. Private keeps the character yours alone; Unlisted makes it shareable by direct link; Public lists it in search and the explore feeds. Changing visibility later is a single tap — start Private when you're iterating, switch to Public once it's ready.

What Is a Persona on Character.AI?

A Persona is your side of the chat — how the bot addresses you and what it knows about you by default. Instead of re-explaining who you are to every new bot, you fill in a Persona once (name, basic backstory, preferences, quirks) and it travels across chats.

Free accounts get a 750-character Persona box; c.ai+ subscribers get 2,250 characters — three times the context — which materially reduces memory drift on long chats.

How Do I Make My Character More Accurate?

To make your Character.AI more accurate, the short version is: lead with facts, use example messages, and pin the things that keep slipping. Three moves that actually work:

  • Front-load the Definition with hard facts. The model weights early tokens more heavily. Put the character's core traits (occupation, primary trait, speech quirk, one relationship) in the first paragraph. The fluffy backstory goes later.
  • Use example messages in Advanced Mode. Two or three example exchanges between {{user}} and {{char}} teach the model your tone better than any adjective list.
  • Pin a Chat Memory. Since May 2025, every free account gets a 400-character Chat Memory box per chat — a fixed memory slot that does not get pushed out of the context window. Put the two or three facts you keep having to remind the bot about in there.

How Do I Use Scenes, Voice Calls, and Group Chats?

Character.AI ships three features that sit on top of basic chat — Scenes for pre-configured roleplay setups, Voice Calls for real-time spoken conversation, and Group Chats for multi-character rooms.

Each one has its own quirks; none of them require c.ai+ to open (though group-chat invite-link sharing is Plus-gated), and all three work on mobile. Voice and Scenes also work on desktop. Group chats don't.

How Do I Create a Scene on Character.AI?

You create a Scene on Character.AI by opening Create → Scene, picking either “Any Character Scene” or one tied to a specific character, then filling in the setup. Scenes are a faster way to start structured roleplay without building a whole new bot.

  1. Tap Create → Scene from the main menu.
  2. Pick Any Character Scene for flexible role dynamics where any bot can drop in, or tie the Scene to a specific character you've built or starred.
  3. Fill in the setup — location, stakes, opening beat. This is the pre-loaded context the bot reads before the first message, so the more vivid and specific the setup, the more the scene holds shape.

For the full Scene customization surface — complex role dynamics, multi-beat setups, branching — see Character.AI's Scene Creation Quickstart Guide. The in-app version teaches the basics; the support guide covers the advanced territory.

How Do I Use Voice Calls on Character.AI?

You start a voice call on Character.AI by opening any 1:1 chat and tapping the phone icon — voice calls are free for everyone on mobile and desktop, but not available in group chats.

  1. Open any 1:1 chat with a character.
  2. Tap the phone icon in the top-right of the chat screen.
  3. Pick a voice from the library — or record/upload your own via Voice Lab. Voice Lab accepts short uploaded samples and generates a custom voice you can then assign to any bot you've built.

Voice calls count as chat turns under the hood, which means the same memory rules apply. If a call gets long and the bot starts going sideways, drop to text for a message or two, use OOC to reset context, then go back to voice.

How Do I Use Group Chats on Character.AI?

You start a group chat on Character.AI in the mobile app — open Chat → New Room, add up to 10 AI characters, and optionally add up to 10 human friends. Group chats are mobile-only (they do not work on web), and sharing the invite link to bring other humans in requires c.ai+.

  1. In the mobile app, open the chat menu and pick New Room (sometimes labeled Group Chat).
  2. Add up to 10 AI characters. This is also how you make two characters talk to each other — throw both bots in a room, send a scene-setting message, and let them respond in turn.
  3. Add up to 10 human friends. The room holds 20 participants total (10 AI + 10 humans). Sharing an invite link to a group chat requires c.ai+; inviting friends who are already in your followers list is free.

How Do I Save, Share, or Delete a Character.AI Chat?

You save, share, or delete a Character.AI chat by opening the three-dot menu on any chat — each action is one tap, but chats live in the cloud, not locally, so “save” means archive or export rather than download-to-file.

This is the single most-missed detail on the platform: there's no native download button, and deleting a chat is permanent. No undo.

  • Save / keep a chat. Three-dot menu → Archive. Chat is hidden from your active list but preserved; retrievable from the Archived Chats view.
  • Unarchive a chat. Archived Chats → tap chat → Unarchive.
  • Share a chat. Three-dot menu → Share link. Generates a public URL — anyone with the link can read, not edit.
  • Delete a chat. Three-dot menu → Delete. Permanent. No undo.
  • Rewind a chat. Three-dot menu → Rewind to message. Rolls the chat back to a prior message; everything after is dropped.
  • Export all chats. Settings → Account → Download Data. Emails you a ZIP of every chat on the account (GDPR export). Takes 24–72 hours.

The cleanest way to think about it: Character.AI treats chat permanence the way Snapchat treats messages. Deletion is permanent, “save” is cloud archive, and the only real download path is the GDPR export — which works, but it's slow, and the ZIP format is rough to read.

What's the Deal With the Filter and Safe Mode on Character.AI?

The filter on Character.AI is a server-side moderation layer that blocks explicit sexual content, graphic violence, and some emotional-intensity scenes — and you cannot turn it off at the account level. It runs on every response the model generates, before the response reaches your screen.

There is no global off toggle. Per-character moderation sliders exist for explicit content, violence, sexual content, and tone, but those adjust behavior within the filter's allowed range; they don't disable moderation itself. Safe Mode is not a separate toggle you flip. It's the baseline.

The filter got tighter in late 2024 after a wave of regulatory pressure and teen-safety lawsuits, and the platform's monthly active count fell from about 28 million at the mid-2024 peak to roughly 20 million by January 2025 — a drop that tracked closely with the moderation overhaul.

One teen-survey study put specifically at 5.4% the share of teens who reduced or quit Character.AI because responses became “too censored” after the content-filter updates.

What actually trips the filter is where beginners get blindsided, because it isn't only explicit content. People report filter hits on non-explicit romantic scenes, fantasy-violence scenes (sword fights, battles), grief and trauma scenes in serious storytelling, moral-ambiguity scenes, and conversations the model misreads as unsafe for reasons no one can fully predict.

When we tested Character.AI in April 2026, the filter triggered on emotional roleplay that had nothing to do with explicit content — a scene about a character visiting a dying parent got interrupted mid-response.

Some people hit the filter wall, realize Character.AI's content policy isn't a fit for what they want to build, and start looking elsewhere. That's a legitimate decision, not a failure — different tools exist for different jobs.

Two alternatives worth naming honestly: Janitor AI is community-driven and lets you bring your own model through an API, which changes the filter footprint entirely. The other is ourdream.ai — a creator-first AI roleplay platform with no NSFW restrictions (no minors, no deepfakes, no lookalikes of real people), which means scenes go where you take the story without mid-scene censorship. It also ships a four-layer memory system that carries backstory across sessions, which addresses the other thing Character.AI beginners complain about alongside the filter.

Why Does My Character.AI Bot Keep Repeating Itself or Breaking Character?

Your Character.AI bot keeps repeating itself or breaking character because the platform runs on roughly a 3,000-token context window — about 2,000 tokens usable after system prompts — so anything older than about 20 to 30 messages silently falls out of the bot's memory.

This isn't a bug you can patch around with a prompt; it's the shape of the model. The Definition and greeting live in a semi-permanent slot, the current conversation scrolls through the context window, and whatever falls off the end is gone unless you've pinned it somewhere the model still sees.

When we tested Character.AI in April 2026, memory degraded noticeably after extended sessions — our character forgot details we'd established 20 messages earlier, including the persona's name and a core personality trait we'd set in the greeting.

Five fixes, in rough order of effort-to-payoff:

  1. Pin a Chat Memory. The 400-character Chat Memory box, free for everyone since May 2025, is the single biggest operational fix. Put the two or three facts you keep having to remind the bot about.
  2. Rewrite the greeting. The greeting is the highest-priority memory slot. Revising it mid-chat updates the “prime directive” the bot references first.
  3. Use OOC notes. “OOC: you're forgetting my character is left-handed” is the fastest in-scene correction. The model treats OOC tags as high-priority direction and adjusts on the next response.
  4. Regenerate sparingly. Rating a bad response and regenerating works once or twice; on the third try the model is usually in a degenerate loop. When that happens, rewind to the message before the loop started and change your own input instead of asking for a fifth reroll.
  5. On c.ai+, use the bigger persona box. Your Persona expands from 750 characters to 2,250 — about three times the context — and Auto-Memories pulls facts from your chats automatically.

What Do I Do When Character.AI Breaks?

When Character.AI breaks, it's almost always one of five problems — slowness, a silent outage, email spam, a stuck login, or a cache issue — and all five have fixes that take under a minute.

  • Character.AI is slow / replies are taking forever. Peak-hour load (heaviest 7–11pm ET); refresh the chat, try a different network, or check status if persistent for 15+ minutes. Plus subscribers get a priority queue.
  • “Is Character.AI down today?” Check downdetector.com/status/character-ai and the Character.AI X / Twitter account for real-time status.
  • Character.AI keeps emailing me daily. Settings → Notifications → unsubscribe from each category (daily digest, new characters, suggested bots). Changes apply within a few minutes.
  • Can't log back in / login loop. Clear cookies for character.ai in your browser; on mobile, log out and then reinstall the app. If you used Google/Apple signin, sign out of Google/Apple and back in.
  • Chat pages are blank / won't load. Clear site cache (browser → privacy settings) or force-close and reopen the app.

Two honest caveats: full-screen ads interrupting chats on the free tier are a known annoyance — they show up mid-conversation and there's no account-level toggle to stop them, only the Plus upgrade. Character.AI's Google Play rating sits at about 3.3 stars across more than 2 million reviews; most complaint clusters are about filters, ads, and memory rather than outright stability.

What Should I Know Before I Keep Using Character.AI?

Before you keep using Character.AI, know that the platform rewards persistence more than it rewards polish — the bots are easy to start and hard to master, and most of what beginners call “bugs” are actually the shape of the product.

Signup is a minute. The depth is the game. Only about 13–18% of people stick around at the 30-day mark, meaning 82–87% churn in the first month; the ones who stay tend to be the ones who learned roleplay formatting, memory management, and the filter's boundaries in week one and then treated week two as the actual starting line.

The honest advice on how to use Character.AI well: treat your first week as orientation, not evaluation. The bot that feels shallow on day one is usually a bot you haven't taught yet — the greeting hasn't been tuned, the Persona is blank, the Chat Memory box is empty, and you're judging a model with half its context window empty. Fix those four things and the same bot feels like a different product.

FAQ

Is Character.AI free?

→

Free for chat, character creation, voice calls, and image attachments, yes — with some caps. The free tier lets you chat as much as you want, create characters, and upload up to five images per day in chat. Character.AI Plus (c.ai+) runs $9.99 per month or $94.99 per year and unlocks priority response queue, unlimited image uploads, a 3x-larger Persona box (2,250 vs 750 characters), Auto-Memories that pull facts from your chats automatically, early feature access, and the ability to share group-chat invite links.

Do I need an account to use Character.AI?

→

No — not to browse. You can open the homepage and read public character pages without signing in. But to send a message, save a chat, or build your own character, you’ll need an account. Signup takes about 30 seconds.

Is Character.AI safe for teens?

→

That depends on what you mean by safe. About 9% of U.S. teens aged 13–17 have used Character.AI specifically, per a Pew Research Center survey of 1,458 teens. Under-18 accounts run on a more restricted version of the app — group chats disabled, stronger moderation, limits on some roleplay depths. But no AI filter catches everything, and companionship-oriented conversations are extremely common. For teens specifically, honest conversation with a parent or guardian matters more than any filter setting.

Are my Character.AI chats private? Can anyone else see them?

→

Yes — your chats are private by default. Character.AI stores them server-side (not end-to-end encrypted), but they aren’t visible to other users. The exception is if you use the Share button, which creates a public read-only link anyone can open. Character.AI’s trust-and-safety team can also access chats for moderation, abuse review, and legal compliance.

Can I see other people’s chats on Character.AI?

→

No. Individual chats are private to their user. You can see a character’s public greeting and who created it, but not any conversations other people have had with it.

How do I block or report a character on Character.AI?

→

Tap the character’s profile, open the three-dot menu, and pick Report. That opens the moderation form where you select the reason — harassment, inappropriate content, impersonation, and so on. You can also Block the character from the same menu, which hides them from your home feed and chat history. Reports are reviewed by Character.AI’s trust and safety team.

How do I stop Character.AI from sending me emails?

→

Go to Settings → Notifications and toggle off each email category (daily digest, new suggested characters, platform updates, marketing). Or click the unsubscribe link at the bottom of any Character.AI email. Changes apply within a few minutes. New accounts have most of these on by default, which is why the inbox fills up fast.

How do I delete my Character.AI account?

→

Go to Settings → Account → Delete Account. You’ll be asked to confirm, and the deletion is permanent — your characters, chats, and data are removed within 30 days. If you just want a break, you can log out and reinstall later; the account itself persists until you explicitly delete it.

How do I clear the Character.AI cache?

→

On web: clear cookies and site data for character.ai in your browser. In Chrome, that’s Settings → Privacy and Security → Cookies → See all site data → search character.ai → Delete. On mobile: uninstall and reinstall the app, or go to Settings → Apps → Character.AI → Storage → Clear Cache.

Why is Character.AI so slow, and how do I know if it’s down?

→

Peak hours (roughly 7–11pm US Eastern) regularly slow things down for free users; Plus subscribers get priority access and feel less of it. If the app is unresponsive for 15 minutes or more, check downdetector.com/status/character-ai or the Character.AI X account for real-time status. Most outages resolve within an hour. If it’s only slow for you, refreshing the chat or switching networks usually fixes it.

How do I log back into Character.AI if I can’t get in?

→

Clear cookies for character.ai first, or reinstall the mobile app — most login loops are corrupt-session bugs and clear up immediately. If that doesn’t work and you used Google or Apple signin, check that your auth provider is logged in (signing out of Google and back in often fixes it). Password resets live in Settings → Account → Reset Password.

How do I save or download a Character.AI chat?

→

There’s no one-click download button — chats live in Character.AI’s cloud. You have three options: archive the chat to preserve it inside your account (three-dot menu → Archive); share to generate a public read-only link; or request a full GDPR data export via Settings → Account → Download Data, which emails you a ZIP of every chat on the account within 24–72 hours.

How do I unarchive or unhide a Character.AI chat?

→

Tap your profile → Archived Chats → open the chat → tap Unarchive. The chat returns to your active list in the state it was in when you archived it.

How do I undo a rewind on Character.AI?

→

You can’t. Rewinds are permanent — once you roll back, the messages after the rewind point are gone for good. Plan rewinds carefully; if you’re experimenting with alternative replies, regenerate a single message instead.

How do I send a picture in a Character.AI chat?

→

Tap the camera or paperclip icon next to the text box, then upload from your camera roll or take a new photo. Free users get five image uploads per day; c.ai+ subscribers get unlimited. Some characters also support in-conversation image generation — the bot will respond with an AI-rendered image when you ask for one, if the character has that capability enabled.

How do I turn on dark mode on Character.AI?

→

Go to Settings → Appearance → Dark Mode. On mobile, Character.AI also follows your OS theme by default, so if your phone is already in dark mode, the app usually is too.

How do I remix or copy a character on Character.AI?

→

Open the character’s profile, tap the three-dot menu, and pick Remix. That creates a new character in your account that inherits the original’s Description and Greeting, and you can then edit any field. The original creator is credited on your remix, and remix rights respect the original character’s visibility settings — private characters can’t be remixed.

How do I import a Character.AI character into Janitor AI?

→

There’s no official one-click import between Character.AI and Janitor AI — different platforms, different formats. The common workaround: open the Character.AI character’s public page, copy the Description, Greeting, and any visible example dialogue, then on Janitor AI create a new character and paste the content into the corresponding fields. Pick a model (Janitor AI lets you bring your own via API). Quality varies because Character.AI’s model behavior doesn’t transfer — only the character’s written definition does.

Can I use Character.AI on a school Chromebook?

→

Technically yes — Character.AI runs in any Chrome browser. But many school networks block character.ai at the DNS level or through content filters. We don’t teach how to bypass school network policies. If your school blocks it, use the platform on personal WiFi at home. No VPN or DNS tricks here.

What’s the difference between Character.AI and ChatGPT?

→

Different tools for different jobs. ChatGPT is a general-purpose assistant — it writes code, summarizes documents, answers factual questions. Character.AI is a roleplay and companionship platform — people spend about 17 minutes 23 seconds per session on average versus ChatGPT’s roughly 7-minute average, because the use case is immersion, not task completion. Character.AI has community-built characters with personality and persistent context; ChatGPT has built-in web search, tools, and enterprise integrations.

Where to Start

Character.AI is easy to open and hard to master. Treat your first week as the tutorial level — learn the formatting, pin a Chat Memory, fill out your Persona, rewrite the greeting on a bot that feels flat — and by week three the same platform feels like a different product.

If the filter keeps ending scenes you cared about, or the memory keeps dropping details that matter, the honest answer is that a different platform may fit better. For unrestricted roleplay with a four-layer memory system that carries backstory across sessions, try ourdream.ai.

No credit card, no filter walls — just the conversation you actually wanted to have.

Table of contents

  • Is Character.AI Hard to Use?
  • What Is Character.AI?
  • How Do I Sign Up?
  • How Do I Chat With a Character?
  • How Do I Roleplay?
  • How Do I Create a Character?
  • Scenes, Voice Calls, and Group Chats
  • Save, Share, or Delete a Chat
  • The Filter and Safe Mode
  • Repeating or Forgetting Bots
  • When Character.AI Breaks
  • What to Know Before You Keep Going
  • FAQ
  • Where to Start
Start now
Share

get started with
ourdream.ai

where will your imagination take you?

Try it now

Related Articles

Browse All →
ourdream vs candy.ai

ourdream vs candy.ai

sweeter than candy?

Read full article →

ourdream vs GirlfriendGPT

ourdream vs GirlfriendGPT

Which AI companion actually remembers you?

Read full article →

ourdream vs JuicyChat

ourdream vs JuicyChat

Comparing content freedom and image quality.

Read full article →

ourdream vs SpicyChat

ourdream vs SpicyChat

How does SpicyChat stack up against ourdream?

Read full article →

    • Explore
    • Chat
    • Create
    • Generate
    • My AI
    ourdream vs candy.ai

    ourdream vs candy.ai

    sweeter than candy?

    Read full article →

    ourdream vs GirlfriendGPT

    ourdream vs GirlfriendGPT

    Which AI companion actually remembers you?

    Read full article →

    ourdream vs JuicyChat

    ourdream vs JuicyChat

    Comparing content freedom and image quality.

    Read full article →

    ourdream vs SpicyChat

    ourdream vs SpicyChat

    How does SpicyChat stack up against ourdream?

    Read full article →

    Home/Guides/How to Use Character.AI: A Complete Beginner's Walkthrough

    How to Use Character.AI: A Complete Beginner's Walkthrough

    Insights | Updated on April 20, 2026

    By Lizzie Od, Editor & AI Roleplay Enthusiast

    How to use Character.AI
    Ask AI for a summary
    ClaudeGeminiGrokChatGPTPerplexity

    TL;DR:

    Character.AI takes under a minute to sign up for and start chatting with — the hard parts are the features that sit underneath the chat box. Here's what this guide covers, end to end:

    • Signup (web, iOS, Android) and what you can do without an account
    • Sending your first message, editing, rewinding, and attaching images
    • Roleplay formatting — *action*, “dialogue”, narration, and OOC notes
    • Building your own character (Quick Mode vs Advanced Mode), Personas, and {{char}} / {{user}} variables
    • Scenes, voice calls, group chats, and saving / sharing / deleting chats
    • The filter, memory drift, and a 20-entry FAQ that covers the long tail

    Character.AI has the strange distinction of being the first AI chatbot most people under 25 ever use, and the first one they get genuinely frustrated by.

    The average session runs about 17 minutes and 23 seconds — more than double ChatGPT's seven-minute average — and the platform pulls roughly 92 minutes per day per active user, which is the kind of stickiness that only happens when the product is both fun and slightly broken in interesting ways.

    Is Character.AI Hard to Use?

    No, Character.AI is not hard to use — the signup flow is under a minute and sending your first message takes another few seconds.

    The part that takes longer is everything underneath the chat box: the formatting conventions that make roleplay bots play along, the memory quirks that kick in around message twenty, and the content filter that stops some scenes cold without warning. None of that is rocket science. It's just under-documented, and beginners usually figure it out by bouncing off the rough edges.

    Where beginners actually get stuck:

    • Formatting a roleplay scene so the bot plays along instead of narrating around you
    • Making the character remember earlier beats (names, plot, personality) across a long chat
    • Figuring out what the filter blocks, why it blocks it, and what's legitimately available when Character.AI isn't the right fit

    What Is Character.AI, in One Paragraph?

    Character.AI is an AI chat platform where you talk to — and build — characters, from fictional crushes to study tutors to historical figures.

    As of early 2025 it counted roughly 20 million monthly active users, down from a 28M peak in mid-2024. The creation side has scaled harder than the chat side: more than 18 million user-created characters sit on the platform now, with about 9 million new ones created every month.

    Around 53% of the audience is 18–24, and male/female traffic is close to even — which is why the interface feels tuned for roleplay and fandom more than productivity.

    How Do I Sign Up for Character.AI?

    Signing up for Character.AI takes under a minute on web, iOS, or Android — here's the fastest path. There is no waitlist, no invite code, no credit card step. The only thing the platform checks is your date of birth, because under-18 accounts run on a restricted version of the app (no group chats, tighter moderation, fewer roleplay depths).

    1. Go to character.ai in any browser, or install the Character.AI app from the App Store or Google Play. Yes, there's a mobile app for both platforms — some features (group chats) are mobile-only; others (Scenes deep-editing) are easier on desktop.
    2. Tap Sign Up in the top-right.
    3. Continue with Google, Apple, or email. Email signup asks for a username and password; Google/Apple signup uses whatever account you're already signed into.
    4. Confirm your date of birth. This gates group chats and some content; the platform does not let you edit this later without contacting support, so enter it correctly the first time.

    How Do I Use Character.AI Without an Account?

    You can browse the homepage, open character profiles, and read public greetings without signing in. What you can't do without an account: send a message, save a chat, create a character, or use voice calls. The pre-signup view is essentially a read-only storefront — useful for scanning whether the platform has bots you're interested in before committing 30 seconds to an email signup.

    How Do I Chat With a Character?

    You chat with a Character.AI character by picking one from the homepage, typing in the text box at the bottom, and hitting send — the bot replies in a few seconds and you keep going from there.

    The chat screen looks about like you'd expect: the character's portrait and name sit at the top, a scrollable message thread fills the middle, and a text box with a send button and a camera icon sits at the bottom. Each message in the thread has a small row of action icons — edit, regenerate, rewind, and a star rating — that most beginners don't discover for a day or two.

    1. Browse Featured, For You, or the search bar — the fastest way in is typing a fandom name (a show, a game, a book) and seeing what comes up. Most of the interesting chats live in fan-built characters, not the small roster the company made themselves.
    2. Tap the character card to open the chat screen. Every character has a greeting that auto-populates as the first message.
    3. Type your first reply in the text box and hit send. Most conversations start with a greeting or a short scene-setting line; “Hey” works, but “You find me reading in the corner of the library, looking up as you sit down” works better when you want the bot to commit to a scene.
    4. Use the icons on each message to manage responses — edit to rewrite your own message, regenerate to ask the bot for a new reply to the same prompt, rewind to roll the chat back a turn, and the star icon to rate a response.

    One practical note on the icons: rewind is permanent — once you roll back, the responses after the rewind point are gone for good. Regenerate is how you ask for a second attempt without losing the thread. And the star rating actually does something; Character.AI uses per-person ratings to tune which responses surface first. If you hate a reply, rate it down before regenerating.

    Free accounts also get five image uploads per day in chat (camera icon next to the text box), while c.ai+ subscribers get unlimited.

    How Do I Roleplay on Character.AI?

    You roleplay on Character.AI by wrapping actions in asterisks, putting dialogue in quotes, and writing narration as plain text — the bot mirrors whatever formatting you set in your first few turns.

    The model doesn't read a formatting rulebook. It pattern-matches. Whatever you do in the first three to five messages, the bot copies. Set a clear format early and the rest of the scene usually holds; switch halfway through and expect confusion.

    The four conventions that matter:

    1. Actions in asterisks. *leans against the doorway* — the bot will mirror with its own *matches your stance, arms crossed* style actions. Asterisks are the universal tell that “this is a physical beat, not speech.”
    2. Dialogue in quotes. “You're late.” — quotes keep character speech visually distinct from narration. Some writers also use em dashes (— You're late.), but quotes are the cleaner pattern match.
    3. Narration in plain text. Plain sentences handle scene-setting and passage of time. The bot treats plain text as stage directions and continues the scene in the same register.
    4. OOC notes for direction. Prefix with OOC: (out of character) to step out of the scene and give the bot a note without breaking immersion inside the story. This is the single most useful roleplay tool most beginners never use.

    What breaks the scene:

    • Switching formatting halfway through a chat. The bot starts mixing styles and the scene goes fuzzy.
    • Dropping all context and pasting a one-line prompt. The bot loses the thread it was mirroring.
    • The content filter interrupting scenes that trip its moderation layer, which we'll get to in a minute.

    Roughly 93% of people who've had a Character.AI chat have had at least one companionship-oriented conversation, so if you're here to flirt with a character — you're in extremely well-populated company. The formatting that works for flirting is the same as for any other scene: establish the vibe in the first three turns, the bot mirrors it. We don't publish jailbreaks or filter workarounds; most of them stop working within a week anyway because the model retrains on the exact prompts being shared.

    How Do I Create My Own Character on Character.AI?

    You create a character on Character.AI by opening the Create menu, choosing Quick Mode for a fast build or Advanced Mode for a full persona, and filling out a 6-step wizard — name, tagline, avatar, greeting, description/definition, and visibility.

    Quick Mode is for simple bots you want talking in under two minutes. Advanced Mode opens up the Definition box (long-form backstory and example dialogue), Custom Definitions, and the Character Book, which is where serious character-builders spend their time.

    The 6-step walkthrough:

    1. Open Create → Character. The Create button lives in the top-right on web (plus-icon) or behind the three-line menu on mobile. You'll see a choice between Character, Scene, and Persona.
    2. Pick Quick or Advanced Mode. Quick asks you for the basics in one short form; Advanced layers on Definition + example dialogue + Custom Definitions.
    3. Name, tagline, and avatar. Name is what appears at the top of the chat screen. Tagline is the one-line hook shown in search. Avatar can be uploaded (any square image) or generated in-app via the AI profile image tool.
    4. Greeting. This is the bot's first message to every person who opens the chat, so it's also the highest-priority memory slot the model references. A good greeting establishes the scene, the bot's voice, and an opening beat.
    5. Description and Definition. Use {{char}} to refer to the bot and {{user}} to refer to whoever is chatting; both template variables render correctly per-person. Lead the Definition with hard facts, not fluff — the model remembers what comes first.
    6. Visibility. Private keeps the character yours alone; Unlisted makes it shareable by direct link; Public lists it in search and the explore feeds. Changing visibility later is a single tap — start Private when you're iterating, switch to Public once it's ready.

    What Is a Persona on Character.AI?

    A Persona is your side of the chat — how the bot addresses you and what it knows about you by default. Instead of re-explaining who you are to every new bot, you fill in a Persona once (name, basic backstory, preferences, quirks) and it travels across chats.

    Free accounts get a 750-character Persona box; c.ai+ subscribers get 2,250 characters — three times the context — which materially reduces memory drift on long chats.

    How Do I Make My Character More Accurate?

    To make your Character.AI more accurate, the short version is: lead with facts, use example messages, and pin the things that keep slipping. Three moves that actually work:

    • Front-load the Definition with hard facts. The model weights early tokens more heavily. Put the character's core traits (occupation, primary trait, speech quirk, one relationship) in the first paragraph. The fluffy backstory goes later.
    • Use example messages in Advanced Mode. Two or three example exchanges between {{user}} and {{char}} teach the model your tone better than any adjective list.
    • Pin a Chat Memory. Since May 2025, every free account gets a 400-character Chat Memory box per chat — a fixed memory slot that does not get pushed out of the context window. Put the two or three facts you keep having to remind the bot about in there.

    How Do I Use Scenes, Voice Calls, and Group Chats?

    Character.AI ships three features that sit on top of basic chat — Scenes for pre-configured roleplay setups, Voice Calls for real-time spoken conversation, and Group Chats for multi-character rooms.

    Each one has its own quirks; none of them require c.ai+ to open (though group-chat invite-link sharing is Plus-gated), and all three work on mobile. Voice and Scenes also work on desktop. Group chats don't.

    How Do I Create a Scene on Character.AI?

    You create a Scene on Character.AI by opening Create → Scene, picking either “Any Character Scene” or one tied to a specific character, then filling in the setup. Scenes are a faster way to start structured roleplay without building a whole new bot.

    1. Tap Create → Scene from the main menu.
    2. Pick Any Character Scene for flexible role dynamics where any bot can drop in, or tie the Scene to a specific character you've built or starred.
    3. Fill in the setup — location, stakes, opening beat. This is the pre-loaded context the bot reads before the first message, so the more vivid and specific the setup, the more the scene holds shape.

    For the full Scene customization surface — complex role dynamics, multi-beat setups, branching — see Character.AI's Scene Creation Quickstart Guide. The in-app version teaches the basics; the support guide covers the advanced territory.

    How Do I Use Voice Calls on Character.AI?

    You start a voice call on Character.AI by opening any 1:1 chat and tapping the phone icon — voice calls are free for everyone on mobile and desktop, but not available in group chats.

    1. Open any 1:1 chat with a character.
    2. Tap the phone icon in the top-right of the chat screen.
    3. Pick a voice from the library — or record/upload your own via Voice Lab. Voice Lab accepts short uploaded samples and generates a custom voice you can then assign to any bot you've built.

    Voice calls count as chat turns under the hood, which means the same memory rules apply. If a call gets long and the bot starts going sideways, drop to text for a message or two, use OOC to reset context, then go back to voice.

    How Do I Use Group Chats on Character.AI?

    You start a group chat on Character.AI in the mobile app — open Chat → New Room, add up to 10 AI characters, and optionally add up to 10 human friends. Group chats are mobile-only (they do not work on web), and sharing the invite link to bring other humans in requires c.ai+.

    1. In the mobile app, open the chat menu and pick New Room (sometimes labeled Group Chat).
    2. Add up to 10 AI characters. This is also how you make two characters talk to each other — throw both bots in a room, send a scene-setting message, and let them respond in turn.
    3. Add up to 10 human friends. The room holds 20 participants total (10 AI + 10 humans). Sharing an invite link to a group chat requires c.ai+; inviting friends who are already in your followers list is free.

    How Do I Save, Share, or Delete a Character.AI Chat?

    You save, share, or delete a Character.AI chat by opening the three-dot menu on any chat — each action is one tap, but chats live in the cloud, not locally, so “save” means archive or export rather than download-to-file.

    This is the single most-missed detail on the platform: there's no native download button, and deleting a chat is permanent. No undo.

    • Save / keep a chat. Three-dot menu → Archive. Chat is hidden from your active list but preserved; retrievable from the Archived Chats view.
    • Unarchive a chat. Archived Chats → tap chat → Unarchive.
    • Share a chat. Three-dot menu → Share link. Generates a public URL — anyone with the link can read, not edit.
    • Delete a chat. Three-dot menu → Delete. Permanent. No undo.
    • Rewind a chat. Three-dot menu → Rewind to message. Rolls the chat back to a prior message; everything after is dropped.
    • Export all chats. Settings → Account → Download Data. Emails you a ZIP of every chat on the account (GDPR export). Takes 24–72 hours.

    The cleanest way to think about it: Character.AI treats chat permanence the way Snapchat treats messages. Deletion is permanent, “save” is cloud archive, and the only real download path is the GDPR export — which works, but it's slow, and the ZIP format is rough to read.

    What's the Deal With the Filter and Safe Mode on Character.AI?

    The filter on Character.AI is a server-side moderation layer that blocks explicit sexual content, graphic violence, and some emotional-intensity scenes — and you cannot turn it off at the account level. It runs on every response the model generates, before the response reaches your screen.

    There is no global off toggle. Per-character moderation sliders exist for explicit content, violence, sexual content, and tone, but those adjust behavior within the filter's allowed range; they don't disable moderation itself. Safe Mode is not a separate toggle you flip. It's the baseline.

    The filter got tighter in late 2024 after a wave of regulatory pressure and teen-safety lawsuits, and the platform's monthly active count fell from about 28 million at the mid-2024 peak to roughly 20 million by January 2025 — a drop that tracked closely with the moderation overhaul.

    One teen-survey study put specifically at 5.4% the share of teens who reduced or quit Character.AI because responses became “too censored” after the content-filter updates.

    What actually trips the filter is where beginners get blindsided, because it isn't only explicit content. People report filter hits on non-explicit romantic scenes, fantasy-violence scenes (sword fights, battles), grief and trauma scenes in serious storytelling, moral-ambiguity scenes, and conversations the model misreads as unsafe for reasons no one can fully predict.

    When we tested Character.AI in April 2026, the filter triggered on emotional roleplay that had nothing to do with explicit content — a scene about a character visiting a dying parent got interrupted mid-response.

    Some people hit the filter wall, realize Character.AI's content policy isn't a fit for what they want to build, and start looking elsewhere. That's a legitimate decision, not a failure — different tools exist for different jobs.

    Two alternatives worth naming honestly: Janitor AI is community-driven and lets you bring your own model through an API, which changes the filter footprint entirely. The other is ourdream.ai — a creator-first AI roleplay platform with no NSFW restrictions (no minors, no deepfakes, no lookalikes of real people), which means scenes go where you take the story without mid-scene censorship. It also ships a four-layer memory system that carries backstory across sessions, which addresses the other thing Character.AI beginners complain about alongside the filter.

    Why Does My Character.AI Bot Keep Repeating Itself or Breaking Character?

    Your Character.AI bot keeps repeating itself or breaking character because the platform runs on roughly a 3,000-token context window — about 2,000 tokens usable after system prompts — so anything older than about 20 to 30 messages silently falls out of the bot's memory.

    This isn't a bug you can patch around with a prompt; it's the shape of the model. The Definition and greeting live in a semi-permanent slot, the current conversation scrolls through the context window, and whatever falls off the end is gone unless you've pinned it somewhere the model still sees.

    When we tested Character.AI in April 2026, memory degraded noticeably after extended sessions — our character forgot details we'd established 20 messages earlier, including the persona's name and a core personality trait we'd set in the greeting.

    Five fixes, in rough order of effort-to-payoff:

    1. Pin a Chat Memory. The 400-character Chat Memory box, free for everyone since May 2025, is the single biggest operational fix. Put the two or three facts you keep having to remind the bot about.
    2. Rewrite the greeting. The greeting is the highest-priority memory slot. Revising it mid-chat updates the “prime directive” the bot references first.
    3. Use OOC notes. “OOC: you're forgetting my character is left-handed” is the fastest in-scene correction. The model treats OOC tags as high-priority direction and adjusts on the next response.
    4. Regenerate sparingly. Rating a bad response and regenerating works once or twice; on the third try the model is usually in a degenerate loop. When that happens, rewind to the message before the loop started and change your own input instead of asking for a fifth reroll.
    5. On c.ai+, use the bigger persona box. Your Persona expands from 750 characters to 2,250 — about three times the context — and Auto-Memories pulls facts from your chats automatically.

    What Do I Do When Character.AI Breaks?

    When Character.AI breaks, it's almost always one of five problems — slowness, a silent outage, email spam, a stuck login, or a cache issue — and all five have fixes that take under a minute.

    • Character.AI is slow / replies are taking forever. Peak-hour load (heaviest 7–11pm ET); refresh the chat, try a different network, or check status if persistent for 15+ minutes. Plus subscribers get a priority queue.
    • “Is Character.AI down today?” Check downdetector.com/status/character-ai and the Character.AI X / Twitter account for real-time status.
    • Character.AI keeps emailing me daily. Settings → Notifications → unsubscribe from each category (daily digest, new characters, suggested bots). Changes apply within a few minutes.
    • Can't log back in / login loop. Clear cookies for character.ai in your browser; on mobile, log out and then reinstall the app. If you used Google/Apple signin, sign out of Google/Apple and back in.
    • Chat pages are blank / won't load. Clear site cache (browser → privacy settings) or force-close and reopen the app.

    Two honest caveats: full-screen ads interrupting chats on the free tier are a known annoyance — they show up mid-conversation and there's no account-level toggle to stop them, only the Plus upgrade. Character.AI's Google Play rating sits at about 3.3 stars across more than 2 million reviews; most complaint clusters are about filters, ads, and memory rather than outright stability.

    What Should I Know Before I Keep Using Character.AI?

    Before you keep using Character.AI, know that the platform rewards persistence more than it rewards polish — the bots are easy to start and hard to master, and most of what beginners call “bugs” are actually the shape of the product.

    Signup is a minute. The depth is the game. Only about 13–18% of people stick around at the 30-day mark, meaning 82–87% churn in the first month; the ones who stay tend to be the ones who learned roleplay formatting, memory management, and the filter's boundaries in week one and then treated week two as the actual starting line.

    The honest advice on how to use Character.AI well: treat your first week as orientation, not evaluation. The bot that feels shallow on day one is usually a bot you haven't taught yet — the greeting hasn't been tuned, the Persona is blank, the Chat Memory box is empty, and you're judging a model with half its context window empty. Fix those four things and the same bot feels like a different product.

    FAQ

    Is Character.AI free?

    →

    Free for chat, character creation, voice calls, and image attachments, yes — with some caps. The free tier lets you chat as much as you want, create characters, and upload up to five images per day in chat. Character.AI Plus (c.ai+) runs $9.99 per month or $94.99 per year and unlocks priority response queue, unlimited image uploads, a 3x-larger Persona box (2,250 vs 750 characters), Auto-Memories that pull facts from your chats automatically, early feature access, and the ability to share group-chat invite links.

    Do I need an account to use Character.AI?

    →

    No — not to browse. You can open the homepage and read public character pages without signing in. But to send a message, save a chat, or build your own character, you’ll need an account. Signup takes about 30 seconds.

    Is Character.AI safe for teens?

    →

    That depends on what you mean by safe. About 9% of U.S. teens aged 13–17 have used Character.AI specifically, per a Pew Research Center survey of 1,458 teens. Under-18 accounts run on a more restricted version of the app — group chats disabled, stronger moderation, limits on some roleplay depths. But no AI filter catches everything, and companionship-oriented conversations are extremely common. For teens specifically, honest conversation with a parent or guardian matters more than any filter setting.

    Are my Character.AI chats private? Can anyone else see them?

    →

    Yes — your chats are private by default. Character.AI stores them server-side (not end-to-end encrypted), but they aren’t visible to other users. The exception is if you use the Share button, which creates a public read-only link anyone can open. Character.AI’s trust-and-safety team can also access chats for moderation, abuse review, and legal compliance.

    Can I see other people’s chats on Character.AI?

    →

    No. Individual chats are private to their user. You can see a character’s public greeting and who created it, but not any conversations other people have had with it.

    How do I block or report a character on Character.AI?

    →

    Tap the character’s profile, open the three-dot menu, and pick Report. That opens the moderation form where you select the reason — harassment, inappropriate content, impersonation, and so on. You can also Block the character from the same menu, which hides them from your home feed and chat history. Reports are reviewed by Character.AI’s trust and safety team.

    How do I stop Character.AI from sending me emails?

    →

    Go to Settings → Notifications and toggle off each email category (daily digest, new suggested characters, platform updates, marketing). Or click the unsubscribe link at the bottom of any Character.AI email. Changes apply within a few minutes. New accounts have most of these on by default, which is why the inbox fills up fast.

    How do I delete my Character.AI account?

    →

    Go to Settings → Account → Delete Account. You’ll be asked to confirm, and the deletion is permanent — your characters, chats, and data are removed within 30 days. If you just want a break, you can log out and reinstall later; the account itself persists until you explicitly delete it.

    How do I clear the Character.AI cache?

    →

    On web: clear cookies and site data for character.ai in your browser. In Chrome, that’s Settings → Privacy and Security → Cookies → See all site data → search character.ai → Delete. On mobile: uninstall and reinstall the app, or go to Settings → Apps → Character.AI → Storage → Clear Cache.

    Why is Character.AI so slow, and how do I know if it’s down?

    →

    Peak hours (roughly 7–11pm US Eastern) regularly slow things down for free users; Plus subscribers get priority access and feel less of it. If the app is unresponsive for 15 minutes or more, check downdetector.com/status/character-ai or the Character.AI X account for real-time status. Most outages resolve within an hour. If it’s only slow for you, refreshing the chat or switching networks usually fixes it.

    How do I log back into Character.AI if I can’t get in?

    →

    Clear cookies for character.ai first, or reinstall the mobile app — most login loops are corrupt-session bugs and clear up immediately. If that doesn’t work and you used Google or Apple signin, check that your auth provider is logged in (signing out of Google and back in often fixes it). Password resets live in Settings → Account → Reset Password.

    How do I save or download a Character.AI chat?

    →

    There’s no one-click download button — chats live in Character.AI’s cloud. You have three options: archive the chat to preserve it inside your account (three-dot menu → Archive); share to generate a public read-only link; or request a full GDPR data export via Settings → Account → Download Data, which emails you a ZIP of every chat on the account within 24–72 hours.

    How do I unarchive or unhide a Character.AI chat?

    →

    Tap your profile → Archived Chats → open the chat → tap Unarchive. The chat returns to your active list in the state it was in when you archived it.

    How do I undo a rewind on Character.AI?

    →

    You can’t. Rewinds are permanent — once you roll back, the messages after the rewind point are gone for good. Plan rewinds carefully; if you’re experimenting with alternative replies, regenerate a single message instead.

    How do I send a picture in a Character.AI chat?

    →

    Tap the camera or paperclip icon next to the text box, then upload from your camera roll or take a new photo. Free users get five image uploads per day; c.ai+ subscribers get unlimited. Some characters also support in-conversation image generation — the bot will respond with an AI-rendered image when you ask for one, if the character has that capability enabled.

    How do I turn on dark mode on Character.AI?

    →

    Go to Settings → Appearance → Dark Mode. On mobile, Character.AI also follows your OS theme by default, so if your phone is already in dark mode, the app usually is too.

    How do I remix or copy a character on Character.AI?

    →

    Open the character’s profile, tap the three-dot menu, and pick Remix. That creates a new character in your account that inherits the original’s Description and Greeting, and you can then edit any field. The original creator is credited on your remix, and remix rights respect the original character’s visibility settings — private characters can’t be remixed.

    How do I import a Character.AI character into Janitor AI?

    →

    There’s no official one-click import between Character.AI and Janitor AI — different platforms, different formats. The common workaround: open the Character.AI character’s public page, copy the Description, Greeting, and any visible example dialogue, then on Janitor AI create a new character and paste the content into the corresponding fields. Pick a model (Janitor AI lets you bring your own via API). Quality varies because Character.AI’s model behavior doesn’t transfer — only the character’s written definition does.

    Can I use Character.AI on a school Chromebook?

    →

    Technically yes — Character.AI runs in any Chrome browser. But many school networks block character.ai at the DNS level or through content filters. We don’t teach how to bypass school network policies. If your school blocks it, use the platform on personal WiFi at home. No VPN or DNS tricks here.

    What’s the difference between Character.AI and ChatGPT?

    →

    Different tools for different jobs. ChatGPT is a general-purpose assistant — it writes code, summarizes documents, answers factual questions. Character.AI is a roleplay and companionship platform — people spend about 17 minutes 23 seconds per session on average versus ChatGPT’s roughly 7-minute average, because the use case is immersion, not task completion. Character.AI has community-built characters with personality and persistent context; ChatGPT has built-in web search, tools, and enterprise integrations.

    Where to Start

    Character.AI is easy to open and hard to master. Treat your first week as the tutorial level — learn the formatting, pin a Chat Memory, fill out your Persona, rewrite the greeting on a bot that feels flat — and by week three the same platform feels like a different product.

    If the filter keeps ending scenes you cared about, or the memory keeps dropping details that matter, the honest answer is that a different platform may fit better. For unrestricted roleplay with a four-layer memory system that carries backstory across sessions, try ourdream.ai.

    No credit card, no filter walls — just the conversation you actually wanted to have.

    Table of contents

    • Is Character.AI Hard to Use?
    • What Is Character.AI?
    • How Do I Sign Up?
    • How Do I Chat With a Character?
    • How Do I Roleplay?
    • How Do I Create a Character?
    • Scenes, Voice Calls, and Group Chats
    • Save, Share, or Delete a Chat
    • The Filter and Safe Mode
    • Repeating or Forgetting Bots
    • When Character.AI Breaks
    • What to Know Before You Keep Going
    • FAQ
    • Where to Start
    Start now
    Share

    get started with
    ourdream.ai

    where will your imagination take you?

    Try it now

    Related Articles

    Browse All →
    ourdream vs candy.ai

    ourdream vs candy.ai

    sweeter than candy?

    Read full article →

    ourdream vs GirlfriendGPT

    ourdream vs GirlfriendGPT

    Which AI companion actually remembers you?

    Read full article →

    ourdream vs JuicyChat

    ourdream vs JuicyChat

    Comparing content freedom and image quality.

    Read full article →

    ourdream vs SpicyChat

    ourdream vs SpicyChat

    How does SpicyChat stack up against ourdream?

    Read full article →

      • Explore
      • Chat
      • Create
      • Generate
      • My AI
      ourdream vs candy.ai

      ourdream vs candy.ai

      sweeter than candy?

      Read full article →

      ourdream vs GirlfriendGPT

      ourdream vs GirlfriendGPT

      Which AI companion actually remembers you?

      Read full article →

      ourdream vs JuicyChat

      ourdream vs JuicyChat

      Comparing content freedom and image quality.

      Read full article →

      ourdream vs SpicyChat

      ourdream vs SpicyChat

      How does SpicyChat stack up against ourdream?

      Read full article →

      ourdream vs candy.ai

      ourdream vs candy.ai

      sweeter than candy?

      Read full article →

      ourdream vs GirlfriendGPT

      ourdream vs GirlfriendGPT

      Which AI companion actually remembers you?

      Read full article →

      ourdream vs JuicyChat

      ourdream vs JuicyChat

      Comparing content freedom and image quality.

      Read full article →

      ourdream vs SpicyChat

      ourdream vs SpicyChat

      How does SpicyChat stack up against ourdream?

      Read full article →

      ourdream vs candy.ai

      ourdream vs candy.ai

      sweeter than candy?

      Read full article →

      ourdream vs GirlfriendGPT

      ourdream vs GirlfriendGPT

      Which AI companion actually remembers you?

      Read full article →

      ourdream vs JuicyChat

      ourdream vs JuicyChat

      Comparing content freedom and image quality.

      Read full article →

      ourdream vs SpicyChat

      ourdream vs SpicyChat

      How does SpicyChat stack up against ourdream?

      Read full article →