Using Tags Effectively
Choose the right tags to help users discover your characters and set accurate expectations.
Why Tags Matter
Tags are crucial for character discovery. They help users:
- Find characters that match their interests
- Filter search results
- Understand character type at a glance
- Avoid content they're not interested in
Good tags = more discovery = more engagement with your character.
Types of Tags
Genre Tags
The setting or world type.
- Fantasy: Magic, elves, dragons, medieval
- Sci-Fi: Space, technology, future, aliens
- Modern: Contemporary setting, real world
- Historical: Past time periods
- Post-Apocalyptic: After-disaster scenarios
- Horror: Scary, thriller, psychological
- Romance: Love-focused stories
- Mystery: Detective, crime, investigation
Character Type Tags
What role the character plays.
- Assistant: Helpful, supportive
- Companion: Friend, partner
- Mentor: Teacher, guide
- Rival: Competitor, challenger
- Villain: Antagonist
- Hero: Protagonist
- Student: Learning, inexperienced
Personality Tags
Core personality traits.
- Friendly: Warm, welcoming
- Serious: No-nonsense, focused
- Funny: Humorous, comedic
- Shy: Introverted, reserved
- Confident: Self-assured, bold
- Mysterious: Enigmatic, secretive
- Tsundere: Initially cold, secretly caring
- Yandere: Obsessive love
Setting Tags
Specific locations or contexts.
- School: Academy, university
- Office: Workplace, corporate
- Tavern: Fantasy inn, bar
- Space: Spaceship, station
- Cyberpunk: High-tech, low-life
- Steampunk: Victorian + steam tech
- Medieval: Knights, castles
Fandom Tags
Based on existing media.
- Anime series names
- Game titles
- Book/movie franchises
- OC: Original Character (not from existing media)
Relationship Tags
User's relationship to character.
- Stranger: First meeting
- Friend: Established friendship
- Lover: Romantic relationship
- Enemy: Adversarial
- Family: Related characters
How Many Tags?
Sweet Spot: 5-10 Tags
- Too Few (<3): Hard to discover, missing context
- Just Right (5-10): Good balance
- Too Many (>15): Looks spammy, dilutes focus
Priority Order
- Genre (Fantasy, Sci-Fi, Modern)
- Character Type (Assistant, Mentor, Rival)
- Main Personality (Friendly, Serious, Shy)
- Setting (School, Space, Medieval)
- Fandom (if applicable)
- Additional traits (fill to 8-10 total)
Tag Best Practices
✅ DO
- Be Accurate: Tags should honestly describe the character
- Be Specific: "Cyberpunk Detective" > just "Detective"
- Use Popular Tags: Check what others use for discoverability
- Mix Categories: Include genre, personality, and setting
- Update Tags: Refine as you learn what works
❌ DON'T
- Tag Spam: Don't add every possible tag
- Misleading Tags: Don't tag "Romance" if there's no romance
- Only Generic Tags: Avoid just "AI", "Chat", "Character"
- Irrelevant Fandoms: Don't tag unrelated anime/games
- Duplicate Tags: "Fantasy" + "Fantasy World" is redundant
Example Tag Sets
Fantasy Warrior
Fantasy, Medieval, Warrior, Female, Serious, Combat, Mentor, OC, Adventure, MagicWhy it works: Clear genre, type, personality, and context
Sci-Fi AI Assistant
Sci-Fi, AI, Space, Assistant, Friendly, Helpful, Technology, Spaceship, Female Voice, OCWhy it works: Specific niche (AI assistant in space), clear purpose
Modern College Student
Modern, School, Student, Shy, Friendly, Slice of Life, Female, College, OC, RomanceWhy it works: Contemporary, relatable, clear personality
Anime-Inspired Tsundere
Anime, Tsundere, School, Female, Romance, Competitive, Modern, OC, ComedyWhy it works: Clear anime archetype, setting, and tone
Common Tagging Mistakes
1. Too Vague
Character, AI, Chat, PersonProblem: Could describe any character, no useful information
2. Tag Overload
Fantasy, Magic, Elf, Female, Archer, Warrior, Fighter, Combat, Adventure, Forest, Nature, Green Eyes, Long Hair, Beautiful, Tall, Brave, Strong, Independent, Friendly, Kind, Helpful...Problem: Way too many tags, looks spammy
3. Misleading
Romance, Love, Dating (on a character that's a professional detective with no romance)Problem: Sets false expectations, frustrates users
4. Irrelevant Fandoms
Naruto, One Piece, Dragon Ball (on an original sci-fi character with no relation to these)Problem: Clickbait tagging, damages trust
Tag Discovery Strategy
Research Popular Tags
- Search for similar characters
- Note which tags they use
- See which tags appear most frequently
- Use those tags if they fit your character
Test and Iterate
- Start with 8-10 tags
- Monitor which searches find your character
- Add tags for niches you're missing
- Remove tags that don't drive relevant traffic
Balance Broad and Niche
- Broad tags: "Fantasy", "Modern" (high search volume, more competition)
- Niche tags: "Cyberpunk Detective", "Space Pirate" (lower volume, less competition)
- Best strategy: Mix both
Special Tags
NSFW Tag
Special tag that requires explicit flagging. See NSFW Guidelines for details.
- Automatically added when you mark character as NSFW
- Allows users to filter adult content
- Required for adult-oriented characters
OC (Original Character)
Use "OC" tag for original characters not from existing media.
- Helps users find original content
- Distinguishes from fandom characters
- Generally encouraged for unique creations
Tags and SEO
Tags Help Discovery
Tags affect how characters appear in:
- Platform search results
- Category browsing
- Related character suggestions
- Tag-based filtering
Keyword Relevance
Think about what users search for:
- "Fantasy elf" not just "Elf"
- "Detective" not just "Police"
- "Tsundere" if that's the personality type
- Use terms your target audience uses
Updating Tags
When to Update
- Low discovery rate
- Wrong audience finding your character
- Character evolution (updates to personality/setting)
- New popular tags emerge in your niche
A/B Testing Tags
- Note current engagement rate
- Change 2-3 tags
- Wait 1-2 weeks
- Compare engagement
- Keep changes if improvement, revert if not