ChaytAI help, policies, and product documents
This is the official ChaytAI documentation hub for users, creators, testers, and reviewers. It explains how the app works, where important policies live, how accounts and credits are handled, and what users should know before chatting, creating characters, viewing ads, or using adult-content settings.
Quick links
What ChaytAI is
ChaytAI is an AI character chat app for adults. Users can browse public characters, create private or public characters, chat with AI-generated replies, tune profile and conversation preferences, compare available models, use credits, and manage safety settings such as NSFW visibility and image blur.
ChaytAI is operated as an independent solo-developer project. The documents on this page are written to describe how this product works. They are not legal advice, medical advice, mental-health advice, financial advice, or a statement that any third-party platform has endorsed the app.
Important age and content notice
ChaytAI is intended for adults only. The app may include public characters, fictional roleplay, mature themes, NSFW labels, image blur controls, and adult-content preferences. In the Android APK, NSFW character cards stay hidden in browsing, while age-verified users may separately allow NSFW Behavior inside chats. Users who do not want NSFW content should keep NSFW hiding and image blur controls enabled in Settings.
Adult content rules are explained in the Terms and Community Rules. Content involving minors, non-consensual sexual abuse involving real people, harassment, illegal material, payment abuse, and security abuse are not allowed.
Advertising and Google ads
ChaytAI may show ads or rewarded ad placements to help support free access, credits, hosting, and development. Ad scripts may be loaded from advertising providers such as Google when ads are enabled on a page. Ads are separate from ChaytAI's own character content and may be subject to the ad provider's policies, consent tools, regional rules, and personalization settings.
ChaytAI does not claim that Google, any ad network, payment processor, app store, or AI provider officially sponsors, certifies, or endorses ChaytAI. The documents here are ChaytAI's own product and policy pages, written so users can understand the service clearly.
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.
Sign-in and saved data
Users can sign in so chats, characters, profile settings, credits, and preferences can be saved to the account. Google sign-in may be available as a convenience option, while normal username or email sign-in may also be used where supported.
Some state may also be stored locally in the browser or Android WebView so the app can recover drafts, keep settings, and avoid losing work during refreshes. Clearing local storage may remove local-only drafts or sign the user out.
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.
Chat behavior and AI limits
AI replies are generated by models and can be wrong, repetitive, too short, too intense, or inconsistent. Character behavior is fictional and should not be treated as advice from a real person or professional. Users should not rely on AI output for emergency, medical, mental-health, legal, financial, or safety decisions.
If a chat feels uncomfortable, the user can leave the conversation, start a new chat, adjust profile settings, change models when available, or report a problem. Conversation memory and pinned summaries are tools for continuity, not guarantees that the AI will remember everything perfectly.
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.
Chayt+ and purchases
Credits, Chayt+ plans, rewards, and purchase options may change as the app changes. Payment confirmation may depend on third-party services such as PayPal, Google Pay, app stores, or other processors. Users should read the checkout screen before paying and contact support if credits or plan status do not update after a reasonable delay.
Credits are virtual app features, not cash or stored value. Abuse such as fake referrals, duplicate claims, chargeback abuse, scripted actions, or account farming may lead to revoked credits or account restrictions.
Images and media
Image generation is currently paused. Character images, uploaded avatars, older generated media that was already saved, tutorial screenshots, and other media may be served through ChaytAI media URLs. Some media may be cached by hosting or CDN services so pages load faster and bandwidth costs stay lower. Public character images may appear on character pages, Discovery, search results, recent chats, and shared previews.
Users should only upload or publish images they own or have permission to use. Adult images should be marked correctly, and illegal or abusive images are not allowed.
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.
Site quality and review notes
These documents are intended to make the site easier to review and easier to use. ChaytAI provides accessible policy pages, visible support contact information, a tutorial, account deletion information, privacy details, terms, and community rules. The goal is that users can understand what the app does before they create an account, publish content, use credits, or interact with ads.
- Policy pages should stay reachable from Settings and public document links.
- Pages should describe real app behavior instead of generic filler text.
- Adult-content controls should be explained clearly and honestly.
- Ads, purchases, credits, and rewards should not be described in a misleading way.
- Contact and account deletion pages should remain available to users.
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.
Support and reports
For account help, deletion questions, policy concerns, payment issues, bug reports, or safety reports, contact [email protected]. Include the account email or username when relevant, plus the bot name, link, screenshot, payment ID, or short description needed to understand the issue.
Do not send passwords, full payment card numbers, government IDs, illegal content, or highly sensitive personal information through email.
For testers
Testers help most when they describe what they expected, what happened, and what device or browser they used. Useful reports include broken images, login loops, slow pages, confusing labels, missing instructions, broken Google Play tester access, and places where mobile UI overlaps or feels hard to tap.
Small feedback is still useful. A single sentence like "I did not know where to start chatting after opening a bot" can point to a real onboarding issue.
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