
When you enter the site and start browsing, you’ll come across dozens of characters, each with a unique personality, style and back story that you may find amusing (or just plain weird) and think to yourself…What is this actually?
Well, it’s kind of a fair question.
MyDreamCompanion isn’t just a chatbot to chat with, it’s more of a conversation where you decide which route to take, it starts with a prompt from a character, and you decide how to respond and move forward from that point on.
A comprehensive guide of how to use Mydreamcompanion Chatbot
You arrive at the site… it looks like quite a lot. Profiles, categories, tags, recommendations. It almost feels like you’re looking through a video app, but instead of movies, you’re finding different characters to chat with.
So, what’s the correct way to start using it, other than blindly clicking on whatever you see? Let’s go over what a normal user would do to use it correctly.
Step 1: Select a Character
When you enter, the first thing you’ll be met with is your own personal casting call.
At the top of the page, it reads:
NSFW AI Chatbot, Start Your Fantasy Now
And below that, you can see several filters and categories.
You can choose to:
Filter Options (Don’t Miss Out)
You can organize them like this:
| Filter | What it actually helps with |
| Popular | Safe picks, widely used |
| Trending | What people are currently into |
| New | Fresh characters (less repetitive) |
| Recent | Your previously viewed ones |
| All Gender | Self-explanatory, but useful |
Following that, you’ll find a row of tags that further specify the type of content. Examples include:
- Realistic
- Anime
- Step Relations
- MILF
- Submissive
- Dominant
- Fantasy
- Monster
Feel free to click the tag you’re interested in. Don’t worry if you are unsure what you’re looking for. Just go to Popular + All and see where that takes you.
Character Cards
Each character card presents:
- Name (Alina, Valeria, Yuri Okanawa, etc.)
- Image (Duh)
- Tags (for character type/personality)
- Description (The meat of the card.)
- Stats (Number of likes/views)
- “Created by” label
Here’s the deal, the description trumps the picture.
You’ll read lines like “Your strict stepmom catches you watching….”
This isn’t just flavor text, it’s your hook.
So, ask yourself:
Do I want something light-hearted? Strict? Relaxed? Story-driven?
Select based on the narrative that resonates with you, not simply visual appeal.
Make an AI Companion
There is an option titled “Make your own AI Companion”.
It is an avenue for those who are particular or merely curious. It permits them to customize their character from the ground up.
Generally, folks disregard it initially but revisit once they have found their preferences.
Step 2: Open the Chat and Start Talking
After you select a character, you immediately enter a chat with them. It now begins to feel much more like a chat.
What You Can See on the Chat Interface:
In this interface, you can see:
Center Panel (Chat Area)
The center portion of this chat page is a conversation between you and the bot, showing:
- Bot name and avatar at the top
- A scenario description just below it
- A first message from the bot (it always starts the chat)
Response Type
Right below the chat, there’s a setting:
| Option | What happens |
| Short Role Play | Quick replies, like texting |
| Long Role Play | More detailed, story-like responses |
If you are testing things, select Short, and if you are looking for immersion, select Long. Long is where the magic occurs. Short mode feels a little dry.
Language Setting
There is a language selector (default: English). It is not that important, but you can choose another language if you like.
Message Input
At the bottom you will see a field that says:
“Type a message…”
That’s it. This is where most people get confused. Do not worry about the wording, just say something that comes to your mind. Example:
- What are you doing right now?
- Why did you come here?
- You are looking different today…
You are going to have some good conversations with it. The AI is going to follow more your tone than your actual words.
Extra Tools Near the Chat Box
You’ll see a few small icons:
| Button | What it likely does |
| + icon | Extra options/tools |
| To Image | Converts interaction into image generation |
| Settings-style icon | Adjusts chat behavior |
| Microphone | Voice/audio interaction |
No worries if you don’t need this right away, but it’s available to use if you want to go further than chat.
Right Panel (Character Profile)
This one is often missed, but it is quite useful.
Here, you’ll see:
- Other photos of the character
- Like or share buttons
- A button for donations
- Tags (just like the ones that help you learn the character’s personality in the description)
- A comments section
- Options for settings
If you’re struggling to know where to take the conversation, look at the tags, as they offer tips on the character’s personality.
Left Sidebar (Navigation)
At the very left of the screen, you will find:
- A list of recent chats (so you can pick up again wherever you left off)
- List of recommended companions
- Buttons for navigating to your messages, the explore page, and so on.
This becomes more of a home base once you start to use it regularly.
Step 3: Create an Account
Sometime throughout your experience with it, you are usually prompted immediately once you start, the website will stop you.
A popup will ask:
Sign up and start chatting for free
Which, of course, appears at a terrible time.
Signup Options
| Method | Speed |
| Fastest | |
| Discord | Also quick |
| X | Optional |
| Standard |
If you are using an email, you can simply write it out and select:
Join For Free
And it will also have the following statement: By signing up, you agree to the Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.
What does it get you?
What the screen tells you:
- Keep messaging
- More engagement
- May be able to post images or videos
- Send audio messages
- Full companion access
This is how it gets you to where the experience actually begins.
Final Thoughts
You don’t exactly learn this app, you sort of grow into it. At first, it’s “Okay, this is cool.”
Then maybe a few messages later and it’s “Yeah wait, that response was good.”
Then you’re starting to play, switching between characters, changing response type, testing different tones, and bam.
One Quick Honest Tip Before We Go: Don’t treat this app like a tool, treat it like a conversation. The more natural you are, the better it works. I know that sounds dumb, but it’s the difference between “meh” and actually engaging. You’ll see what I mean after a few messages.




