Pegasus YaY
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README.md
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Rep Pen Slope: 0.7<br></p>
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<p><strong>The character creation process recomendations (updated)</strong>: In version V4, I want to recommend a new usage method. I strongly recommend generating characters directly in YAML format, rather than starting with natural text first and then converting it to YAML. Gemma 3 turned out to be much better for this use case; you immediately get ready-made, structured characters described in significant detail (in V3, I advised starting the design specifically with natural text, because Mistral and especially Qwen 2.5 had the problem of overly brief character descriptions when generating them directly in YAML).</p>
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<p><strong>VERY IMPORTANT THING</strong>: As I mentioned earlier, this model is EXTREMELY sensitive to the prompt. When I say EXTREMELY, I really mean EXTREMELY. On one hand, this is a positive aspect—the model does exactly what you tell it to. On the other hand, you need to be very careful about the instructions you give it. You don’t necessarily have to write an overly detailed prompt—just include everything you need to get from the card. Be concise but thorough. The model won’t assume anything extra on behalf of the user—only what the user explicitly asks for. For example, if you want a card with a deeply developed personality, you should specify that in the prompt, or if you want to focus on appearance attributes, you need to emphasize that. That’s how CardProjector V4 works.</p>
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<p><strong>MBTI personality profilies: </strong> Absolutely must have! This improves the character's personalities several times over the usual description. I strongly recommend using MBTI personality profiles as an add-on to the character card (see the tricks section regarding the MBTI system): first, generate the character card, for example, in YAML format, and when your character is ready, simply ask the model to supplement this work with an MBTI profile and Enneagram, placing it in a separate section within the card
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</div>
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<!-- Add this section after the Usage Recommendations and before the Content Notice -->
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</details>
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<h2>💬 Examples</h2>
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<details class="chat-example">
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<summary>
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<h2>MBTI usage (
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</summary>
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<div class="message user">
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<div class="role">User</div>
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Rep Pen Slope: 0.7<br></p>
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251 |
<p><strong>The character creation process recomendations (updated)</strong>: In version V4, I want to recommend a new usage method. I strongly recommend generating characters directly in YAML format, rather than starting with natural text first and then converting it to YAML. Gemma 3 turned out to be much better for this use case; you immediately get ready-made, structured characters described in significant detail (in V3, I advised starting the design specifically with natural text, because Mistral and especially Qwen 2.5 had the problem of overly brief character descriptions when generating them directly in YAML).</p>
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<p><strong>VERY IMPORTANT THING</strong>: As I mentioned earlier, this model is EXTREMELY sensitive to the prompt. When I say EXTREMELY, I really mean EXTREMELY. On one hand, this is a positive aspect—the model does exactly what you tell it to. On the other hand, you need to be very careful about the instructions you give it. You don’t necessarily have to write an overly detailed prompt—just include everything you need to get from the card. Be concise but thorough. The model won’t assume anything extra on behalf of the user—only what the user explicitly asks for. For example, if you want a card with a deeply developed personality, you should specify that in the prompt, or if you want to focus on appearance attributes, you need to emphasize that. That’s how CardProjector V4 works.</p>
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<p><strong>MBTI personality profilies: </strong> Absolutely must have! This improves the character's personalities several times over the usual description. I strongly recommend using MBTI personality profiles as an add-on to the character card (see the tricks section regarding the MBTI system): first, generate the character card, for example, in YAML format, and when your character is ready, simply ask the model to supplement this work with an MBTI profile and Enneagram, placing it in a separate section within the card. Generally, you can ask the model to create the personality as an MBTI profile right from the first iteration, when you're just starting to generate the character. It's just that the method with the add-on seemed more convenient to me—there's no fundamental difference here. </p>
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</div>
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<!-- Add this section after the Usage Recommendations and before the Content Notice -->
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</details>
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<h2>💬 Examples</h2>
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<details class="chat-example">
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<summary>
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<h2>MBTI usage (Let's imagine that we've already worked with a character in a chat before)</h2>
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</summary>
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<div class="message user">
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<div class="role">User</div>
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