I've been trying to replicate a fictional adult version of the old Get Your own back game show.
These are are few of the results I have achieved so far, but I'm not happy with some of the details like the lighting and setup, things like with the mettle ramp and motion are tricky but I know I and others on here can do create better.
Hi I suppose I like it when trial and error leads to unexpectedly good results and where people have enjoyed using intuition and wording that works for them.
But here is the prompt as best as I can phrase it 'young woman, wearing colourful t shirt and shorts, screaming expression, sliding down mettle ramp into inflatable pool if slime, gameshow background'
These were created on bing so not all results are prompts are accepted.
If you want to get into it, get a month of ChatGPT with Dall-e 3. It will let you write much longer and more detailed prompts which will get you pretty much exactly what you want if you're willing to experiment.
thereald said: If you want to get into it, get a month of ChatGPT with Dall-e 3. It will let you write much longer and more detailed prompts which will get you pretty much exactly what you want if you're willing to experiment.
MS Designer will allow you 1000 character prompts as opposed to 480 for Bing, otherwise their filtering is largely the same. There is an unofficial API for Bing, that will allow you to use over 480 characters. GPT's filtering is way more aggressive than even bing/designer despite being the same underlying model. I'm struggling to see the advantage of Dall-e 3 though GPT and god knows I've tried everything, jailbreaks, api tweaking and access etc. I guess if pushed, the ability to finetune a prompt is useful but even then you're constrained by the internal guidelines and ethical responsibility. Some of these can be jailbroken, some not but the efforts aren't worth it compared to bing and designer. Also a big downside to GPT is that the secondary prompt re-phrasing is quite aggressive too. You can of course ask it to follow word for word, maintain original context etc but thats just extra work.
thereald said: If you want to get into it, get a month of ChatGPT with Dall-e 3. It will let you write much longer and more detailed prompts which will get you pretty much exactly what you want if you're willing to experiment.
MS Designer will allow you 1000 character prompts as opposed to 480 for Bing, otherwise their filtering is largely the same. There is an unofficial API for Bing, that will allow you to use over 480 characters. GPT's filtering is way more aggressive than even bing/designer despite being the same underlying model. I'm struggling to see the advantage of Dall-e 3 though GPT and god knows I've tried everything, jailbreaks, api tweaking and access etc. I guess if pushed, the ability to finetune a prompt is useful but even then you're constrained by the internal guidelines and ethical responsibility. Some of these can be jailbroken, some not but the efforts aren't worth it compared to bing and designer. Also a big downside to GPT is that the secondary prompt re-phrasing is quite aggressive too. You can of course ask it to follow word for word, maintain original context etc but thats just extra work.
It's not going to work for recreating a scene from 91/2 Weeks, but if someone wants to make 'gunk dunk' pictures, it's probably worth it for them. It's definitely worthwhile for me, the ethical guidelines restrictions can be overcome pretty easily for gameshow stuff, and the filtering is pretty hit-and-miss anyway. The longer prompt length means that something as intricate as a gunk-dunk can be described in detail and the image re-editing is useful.
thereald said: If you want to get into it, get a month of ChatGPT with Dall-e 3. It will let you write much longer and more detailed prompts which will get you pretty much exactly what you want if you're willing to experiment.
MS Designer will allow you 1000 character prompts as opposed to 480 for Bing, otherwise their filtering is largely the same. There is an unofficial API for Bing, that will allow you to use over 480 characters. GPT's filtering is way more aggressive than even bing/designer despite being the same underlying model. I'm struggling to see the advantage of Dall-e 3 though GPT and god knows I've tried everything, jailbreaks, api tweaking and access etc. I guess if pushed, the ability to finetune a prompt is useful but even then you're constrained by the internal guidelines and ethical responsibility. Some of these can be jailbroken, some not but the efforts aren't worth it compared to bing and designer. Also a big downside to GPT is that the secondary prompt re-phrasing is quite aggressive too. You can of course ask it to follow word for word, maintain original context etc but thats just extra work.
It's not going to work for recreating a scene from 91/2 Weeks, but if someone wants to make 'gunk dunk' pictures, it's probably worth it for them. It's definitely worthwhile for me, the ethically guidelines restrictions can be overcome pretty easily for gameshow stuff, and the filtering is pretty hit-and-miss anyway. The longer prompt length means that something as intricate as a gunk-dunk can be described in detail and the image re-editing is useful.
Can that be achieved using designer with the additional prompt length or worst case the unoffical Bing Api? Longer prompts both in GPT and bing/designer all suffer from coherence breakdown regardless. Don't get me wrong, more options is always a good thing but not sure in this case it'd bring anything to the table over designer/Bing. I'd be curious to try one of your prompts if you'd be willing to share privately and see what I can do with Designer, Bing API and GPT api respectively.
I had a quick play around with Bing and reduced the character count by about 60%. I'm not going to say I've improved it as as clearly there is much finetuning to go but the success rate is pretty high through Bing.
Great result with the shortened prompt for bing, it's similar but different to what I get with chatgpt, but a lot of key features are the same - most of these would make the cut for Splat the Brat