2026-05-042 min read

Look — Cyberpunk Character Portrait

Type a vibe. Get an avatar-grade single-character portrait — five subgenres, each with binding visual rules.

Avatar-grade single-character portraits in the cyberpunk family of aesthetics. Type a character description, pick a subgenre — neon cyberpunk, pastel dreamcore, dark gothic, chrome mecha, or kawaii future — and the model produces a key-visual portrait built for profile pictures, alt-identity covers, band art, or creator visual identity. Five subgenres, each with binding visual rules so a pastel-dreamcore avatar never reads as cyber-noir and a chrome mecha never reads as gothic.

Cyberpunk character portrait — neon cyberpunk bounty hunter with HUD overlay

What you bring

Optionally: hair colour, outfit colour, HUD text. Leave them blank and the model picks ones fitting the subgenre. Drop a "HUD text" like "ID: 404" or "UNIT-09" and the model renders it as a small clean overlay near the character.

What you get back

A character-first portrait with deliberate composition, refined material fidelity (skin reads as skin, fabric as fabric, chrome as chrome), and lighting tuned to the subgenre. The character occupies the dominant region of the frame; the environment supports without competing. Pick square 1:1 if you're producing it directly as a profile picture.

One character, no IP, no celebrities

The prompt enforces single-character composition (no group shots), forbids real-celebrity faces, and forbids existing-IP characters. The character is yours, not borrowed. The five-subgenre FORBIDDEN-cue blocks keep the registers from bleeding — pastel can't go grim, gothic can't go pastel, chrome can't go organic.

Cost & timing

8 credits per run. Roughly 50 seconds. With your 20 signup credits you get two before topping up.

Try it →


Inspired by @libearal on X — the most developed of the cyber-character-portrait prompts in the source repo, exploring multiple sub-aesthetic variations within a single character framework. Cinematic neutral-cyberpunk framing came from @iamsofiaijaz; the neon fashion-portrait register came from @ChillaiKalan__. The five-subgenre enforcement, slot scaffolding, and FORBIDDEN-cue blocks are FluxGen's.