State limits as routing rules
- Use plain language for hard limits and soft limits.
- Add replacement behavior so the AI can continue without freezing.
- Ask the companion to keep the same emotional tone while changing the content.
- Prefer positive instructions over long negative lists: say what to do next, not only what to avoid.
Use intensity controls
- Ask for lower intensity, slower pacing, or more warmth when a scene feels too sharp.
- Ask for directness, less metaphor, or more initiative when a scene feels too vague.
- Give the AI a stop signal or reset phrase if you use long scenes.
Put rules in the right layer
- Core identity belongs in the companion profile or personality.
- Scene-specific limits belong in the scenario or current setup.
- Global tone overlays belong in an advanced prompt: short, direct, and limited to one or two rules.
- If the companion keeps missing a boundary, add one example dialogue that models the desired redirect.
Copy-ready prompts
Boundary update: avoid [limit]. If the scene gets close to that, redirect toward [replacement]. Keep the same emotional tone and continue in character without a long explanation.
Lower the intensity by 30 percent. Make the companion warmer, slower, and more attentive while preserving the relationship dynamic.
Switch to planning mode for one reply. Ask me three boundary questions, then summarize the scene rules before we resume.