Tabletop RPG Character AI Images

Bring tabletop heroes to life in your browser with Morphic's Tabletop RPG Character AI image generator. Generate a high-fantasy paladin or a chrome-armed sci-fi merc, hold face and gear with Character Lineup, then animate your character with Image to Video.

Tabletop RPG Characters you can design

Tabletop RPG party sheets you can compose

Mixed-genre party lineup

A paladin, merc, investigator, and survivor posed together against a neutral backdrop, balanced silhouette spacing, each in their genre palette, even key light.

Edit prompt
Mixed-genre party lineup

Character turnaround

One hero drawn front, three-quarter, and back in a single row, gear and proportions consistent across all three, clean reference line weight, neutral backdrop.

Edit prompt
Character turnaround

Gear and loadout sheet

A reference sheet of one hero plus their weapon, pack, and signature gadget, each item drawn separately and labelled by silhouette, consistent genre palette.

Edit prompt
Gear and loadout sheet

Scene-setting portrait key art

A single hero framed in their setting, a fog-lit alley, a starship corridor, or a ruined street, atmospheric rim light, painterly portrait polish for a session handout.

Edit prompt
Scene-setting portrait key art

Make Tabletop RPG Character in three steps

  1. 01

    Describe your Tabletop RPG Character

    Describe the Tabletop RPG Character you want, in plain words.

  2. 02

    Generate the image

    Morphic generates a clean, ready-to-publish image on your canvas in seconds.

  3. 03

    Refine your Tabletop RPG Character

    Tweak the prompt, regenerate variations, then download or share the frame.

Related workflows

You might also like

Simple pricing

Get started for free today, with the option to upgrade or cancel anytime.

Basic

$0/ month
billed as $0 per year

900 monthly credits

1 user only

All models

Workflows

Standard

$0/ month
billed as $0 per year

3200 monthly credits

1 user only

All models

Workflows

Pro

$0/ month
billed as $0 per year

6200 shared monthly credits

1 user

+ up to 4 more at extra cost

All models

Workflows

Pro Max

$0/ month
billed as $0 per year

24000 shared monthly credits

1 user

+ up to 9 more at extra cost

All models

Workflows

Enterprise

For higher limits

Custom

pricing and billing terms

Unlimited credits
Custom seat limits
All models
Workflows
Pricing Gradient

Free

For playing around

$0

forever free

Up to 20 credits
1 user only
Limited models
Workflows

FAQs

Where can I make Tabletop RPG Character art with AI?
You can design characters for any tabletop system directly in your browser on Morphic. Open the Image tool, describe the hero with the genre, gear, and palette spelled out, and Morphic produces the portrait. No installs and no specialist software needed.
What genres and systems can I generate characters for?
High fantasy, science fiction, 1920s occult horror, post-apocalyptic, steampunk, and cosmic horror, among others. Morphic is system-agnostic, so describe the genre, role, and gear and it produces a portrait that fits whatever ruleset you play.
How do I keep a Tabletop RPG Character consistent across a campaign?
Use the Character Lineup workflow to lock the hero's face, gear, and palette before generating, then reference that card in every prompt. Morphic preserves the design so your character stays recognisable in a portrait, a party lineup, and a scene handout from session to session.
Can I make a mixed-genre party in one consistent style?
Yes. Design each character individually with Character Lineup, then prompt a group composition referencing the locked cards. Morphic holds each silhouette and palette steady so a fantasy paladin and a sci-fi merc can share one party portrait without clashing.
How do I write a strong Tabletop RPG Character prompt?
Name the genre and role, the outfit or armour, the signature gear, and the colour palette. For example: "steampunk engineer, brass-buttoned coat, clockwork goggles, wrench, shoulder drone, copper-and-bottle-green palette." Spelling out the genre and gear is what makes the portrait read as a real character build.
Are the characters I make original?
The designs come from your own prompt, so describe an original character rather than a named one from a published game or setting. Genre and archetype cues are free to use; naming a specific copyrighted character is not. Keep the description to traits and gear and the result is yours.