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@@ -212,7 +212,7 @@ As an aside from the last point, I've found some model creators/reviewers can be
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  To start, world and character knowledge of existing IPs and archetypes, or history and mythology, are big ones for anyone with creative aspirations. As an example, your model probably knows some info about The Legend of Zelda series and fantasy tropes in general, but maybe it doesn't quite get the finer details of the situation or task you are asking about: Wrong clothes or colors, incorrect methodology or actions, weird hallucinations in general, etc.
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- The main reason you'd want to know this is to try and save context space with your character cards or world info. If they already know how to play out your character or scene out intrinsically, then that's one potential area you can most likely leave out and skip when writing stuff down. This goes for archetypes as well, such as weird creatures or robots, landmarks, history, culture, or personalities that you want to inject into your story.
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  You can either ask the bot directly what X thing is, or instead ask it to write a brief scenario/script where the things you are asking about in the first place are utilized within a narrative snippet. This will help give you a better idea on what areas the model excels at, and what it doesn't. You could even ask the bot to make a template of your character or archetype to see what it gets right or wrong. Though you should be on the look out for how it formats things as well.
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  To start, world and character knowledge of existing IPs and archetypes, or history and mythology, are big ones for anyone with creative aspirations. As an example, your model probably knows some info about The Legend of Zelda series and fantasy tropes in general, but maybe it doesn't quite get the finer details of the situation or task you are asking about: Wrong clothes or colors, incorrect methodology or actions, weird hallucinations in general, etc.
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+ The main reason you'd want to know this is to try and save context space with your character cards or world info. If they already know how to play out your character or scene intrinsically, then that's one potential area you can most likely leave out and skip when writing stuff down. This goes for archetypes as well, such as weird creatures or robots, landmarks, history, culture, or personalities that you want to inject into your story.
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  You can either ask the bot directly what X thing is, or instead ask it to write a brief scenario/script where the things you are asking about in the first place are utilized within a narrative snippet. This will help give you a better idea on what areas the model excels at, and what it doesn't. You could even ask the bot to make a template of your character or archetype to see what it gets right or wrong. Though you should be on the look out for how it formats things as well.
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