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Chayt help, policies, and creator notes

A plain-language home for the pages people usually look for after the first chat: account basics, safety rules, creator guidance, privacy, credits, and recent changes.

Last updated: May 3, 2026

Quick links

Account and profile basics

Your username is for sign-in. Your display name and profile photo are what make your account recognizable inside the app. The roleplay name, personality, and conversation style fields are different: they help characters understand how to address you and what kind of chat you prefer.

Keep those fields short and natural. A sentence like "I like cozy, slow-burn scenes and playful teasing" is usually more useful than a long list of instructions.

Character creation notes

A good character page gives people a reason to start chatting. The name should be memorable, the description should tell users what kind of experience to expect, and the first message should open a scene instead of repeating the bio.

  • Use the personality field for how the character behaves.
  • Use conversation style for how the character speaks.
  • Use memory for facts that should stay true during chats.
  • Use rules for boundaries, not for every tiny preference.

Discovery and recommendations

Discovery works best when public characters have useful names, clear descriptions, appropriate tags, and images that match the character. Thin pages with only a few words are harder for users to trust and harder for the app to recommend well.

If you publish characters, add enough context for someone to decide if the chat is for them. That improves the experience for users and makes the site feel less empty.

Credits and fair use

Credits are the simple counter that keeps regular chats measured. Chayt+ removes that limit while the plan is active, but normal credits still matter for people who prefer to use the free flow.

Use credits normally. Do not create fake accounts, run scripts, repeat claims, or trick other people into entering codes. That kind of activity makes the service worse for everyone.

If something on the Credits page looks delayed, wait a moment and try again normally. Repeating the same action quickly can look like abuse even when the first issue was only a sync delay.

Quality checklist for public pages

For a healthier site and a better user experience, Chayt pages should have real substance. That means helpful descriptions, readable text, working navigation, useful policy pages, and creator content that is not copied, empty, or misleading.

  • Write clear character descriptions instead of one-word summaries.
  • Keep policy and help pages easy to find from Settings and the footer.
  • Use tags honestly so people do not open the wrong kind of bot.
  • Avoid duplicate, scraped, or placeholder pages that add no value.
  • Make mobile pages readable without overlapping controls.

How Chayt is organized

The main app is split into a few everyday areas. Discover is where public characters appear. Your Characters is where your own drafts and published bots live. Models lets users compare AI models. Credits explains the account balance, daily refill, invites, and credit packs. Settings holds profile, visual preferences, custom AI providers, safety, and account controls.

On mobile, those same areas are available from the bottom tab bar. The goal is that someone can move from finding a character, to chatting, to changing profile preferences, without needing a separate help page open.

What makes a character page useful

A useful character page answers three questions quickly: who is this character, what kind of scene or chat should I expect, and why should I start talking now? A public bot does not need to be long, but it should not feel empty.

  • Use a direct description instead of vague hype.
  • Choose tags that match the actual experience.
  • Give the first message a place, mood, and reason to reply.
  • Keep sensitive or mature content labeled clearly.

For new users

Start with Discovery, open a few public character pages, and read their first messages. When you find one that feels right, press Chat. If the conversation feels too short, too random, or not personal enough, visit Settings and fill in your nickname, personality, and conversation style.

You can keep your profile simple. A roleplay name, a few personality traits, and a preferred chat style are enough for most characters to respond better. The advanced generation settings are optional and should usually be changed one at a time.