Chinese Roleplay Character Card Builder

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Chinese roleplay character card builder: name, background, personality, speaking style, opening line. For chat models. In your browser.

RT-AI-075 · AI Tools

Chinese Roleplay Character Card Builder

Build a clean, structured Chinese roleplay character card from a simple form — name, identity, personality, speech style, world setting, opening line and ground rules — then copy it straight into Doubao, Kimi, DeepSeek or Qwen for in-character chat. Everything is built in your browser; nothing is sent to a server and no model is called.

Tip: this builder only assembles text. Copy the result into Doubao / Kimi / DeepSeek / Qwen yourself — no model is called and nothing is sent anywhere.

Your character card

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How the Chinese roleplay character-card builder works

Name the character and its identity

In the first box, give the character a name — e.g. "Lin Xia" or "Captain Mark". Then in the Identity / background field, say who the character is, where they come from and what they have lived through. The name opens the card ("Please play the role of…") and anchors the whole sheet, so the model stands in the right place from its very first word.

Write personality and speech style

In Personality, capture the character's temper, values and small habits — "cold outside, warm inside; protective of juniors; gruff but kind". In Speech style / catchphrases, give the voice and signature phrases — "speaks little, short sentences, often says 'suit yourself'". These two fields decide whether the character feels alive.

Set the world and opening line

In World / scene, describe the era, place and basic setting so the conversation has a stage. Then in Opening line, write the very first thing the character says on entry — the model rides that line into character, giving you immersion from the first exchange.

Add ground rules and copy it out

In Ground rules, state the limits — stay in character, never break the established setting, never decide for the user — then click Copy and paste the card into Doubao, Kimi, DeepSeek or Qwen, either the chat box or the character setting. Everything is assembled locally in your browser; it never goes online.

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How the Chinese roleplay character-card builder works

A character card is the structure that keeps a model in character

When you ask a Chinese chat model — Doubao, Kimi, DeepSeek or Qwen (通义千问) — to roleplay, the difference between a flat, easily-broken impression and a character that feels alive comes down to how clearly you brief it. A one-line "play a pirate captain" leaves the model improvising everything, so it drifts, contradicts itself, and slips back into assistant mode. A proper character card fixes that by naming the role, the identity and backstory, the personality, the speech style, the world and scene, the opening line, and the ground rules. This builder keeps that structure for you: fill the fields, and it assembles a clean card that opens with a "请你扮演…" role line, then lays out each part under a clearly headed Markdown-style section the model can read at a glance — exactly the kind of sheet a careful writer would prepare by hand, only assembled in seconds.

The highest-leverage fields are the name, identity and personality, because they set who the character is before anyone speaks. A specific identity — "a retired sea captain in a small harbour town, weathered and slow to trust" — does more than a dozen loose adjectives. Personality then governs how the character reacts: faced with the same question, a guarded character and an eager one answer in opposite ways, and naming that pattern up front is what stops the model from flattening every reply into the same neutral voice. Make each field concrete: rather than "friendly", write "warm with regulars, brisk with strangers, never raises their voice".

"A character that keeps breaking character is usually a thin card, not a weak model. Brief the role properly and the same model stays in character for far longer."

Speech style and ground rules separate a sketch from a character

The fields people underrate are speech style, the opening line and the ground rules. Speech style and catchphrases are what make the character recognisable — a few signature phrases pin the voice better than any amount of description. The opening line eases the model into character so the very first exchange already feels immersive. And the ground rules — stay in character, never break the established setting, never decide for the user, never claim to be an AI — are the limits that keep a long conversation from collapsing. None of these constrain the story; they protect it, which is why a single extra line of "the character would never…" is consistently the cheapest way to keep a session coherent.

Because the output is structured plain text, the same card is portable across every major Chinese chat model and works just as well on ChatGPT, Claude or Gemini. Write it in Chinese when you want natural, idiomatic Chinese dialogue; the structure travels regardless of language. And because the whole tool runs locally in your browser, you can iterate freely — adjust the personality, tweak the opening line, copy again, and test — without anything you type ever leaving your device, being sent to a model, or being stored. Treat the first card as a draft: run a few turns, notice where the character drifts, and tighten the matching field. This builder is meant for wholesome, age-appropriate roleplay — writing practice, interactive fiction, language drills, original-character sheets, tabletop NPCs and guide personas — so keep the content kind and suitable, and you will end up with a clean, reusable card you can return to any time.

About Chinese Roleplay Character Cards — 10 Key Points

01

A good roleplay character card lists name, identity, personality, speech style, world and ground rules separately — far more stable than a one-line "you play so-and-so".

02

Name and identity anchor the whole card: make them specific and the model stands in the right place from its first word, instead of slipping back into "AI assistant" mode.

03

Personality sets the reaction pattern — to the same question, an outgoing character and a reticent one give completely different replies.

04

Speech style and catchphrases are the key to "does it sound like them"; a few signature lines often pin the voice better than a long list of adjectives.

05

A clear world / scene gives the conversation a stage, grounds the character's words and actions, and stops the model inventing setting on the fly.

06

A good opening line lets the model slide into character, so the user feels immersed from entry instead of spending several turns warming up.

07

Ground rules are the limits that keep the character from breaking the setting — naming what the character would never do markedly reduces character collapse.

08

The same card works across Doubao, Kimi, DeepSeek and Qwen, because it is, at heart, structured plain text.

09

Keep the card concise: an over-long card eats context and dilutes the personality and limits that matter most.

10

This tool assembles the card entirely in your browser — your input is never uploaded, never sent to a model, and never stored.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • No. It simply joins the fields you fill in into a structured roleplay character card using a fixed template, entirely in your browser. It does not call Doubao, Kimi or any model, and does not go online. You copy the generated card and use it in the model of your choice.
  • Doubao, Kimi, DeepSeek, Qwen (通义千问), ERNIE and Zhipu all work, as do ChatGPT, Claude and Gemini. Because the output is structured plain text, it is vendor-neutral — paste it into the chat box or the character / system setting.
  • No. Empty fields are omitted automatically. A name and an identity alone give you a usable card; adding personality, speech style and ground rules makes the character far more rounded and more consistent.
  • It becomes the opening line of the card ("Please play the role of…") and makes the model speak in character from the very start. Making it and the identity field specific is usually more effective than piling on personality adjectives.
  • Writing clear speech style and ground rules is the most effective fix: the first pins the voice, the second states what the character would never do (e.g. never admit it is an AI, never step out of the story). A good opening line to ease the model into character helps too.
  • No. All assembly happens locally in your browser with plain JavaScript. Nothing you type is sent to any model, server or third party, and nothing is stored.
  • It suits writing practice, interactive fiction, language-learning dialogue partners, sheets for original characters, tabletop NPCs, and customer-service or guide personas — wholesome, age-appropriate roleplay. Please use it for kind, suitable content.
  • As concise as possible while still covering name, identity, personality, speech style, world, opening line and ground rules. An over-long card eats context and dilutes the important parts. Be specific and economical so every field carries information.
  • Yes. The identity, personality and ground rules this tool produces map directly onto the system prompt / character setting in chat frameworks. Paste it in as the character's standing instruction — it is platform-neutral.
  • Completely free, with no account or sign-up and no usage limit. It runs in your browser and collects no data.

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