
I've been testing some personal AI language models (essentially ChatGPT with less power), and have found that they're quite familiar with ABDL stories. With some trial and error prompting and sometimes manually changing their output partway to steer them, they can actually write semi-decent stories with human supervision. It's almost like having a co-writer to collaborate with. They're quite good at roleplay as well, where you can define a character for them, such as a domineering giantess mommy or a regressed little.
I've attached 3 short stories to this post for anybody who wants to check them out. None are amazing, but I thought they were fun. They're a mix of both me and the AI writing. I'm fairly sure the AI was trained on my and other people's writing, since I recognize some familiar turns-of-phrase in its outputs.
It's an interesting method for inspiration, especially for something like captions, where it's sometimes a struggle to figure out how to continue from a point. The writing is a bit simple but the grammar is very good (better than mine really), and with some prompting you can instruct it to write more flowery descriptions (which I haven't included in these examples since none of those stories worked out overall).
Currently the model is only able to handle something like 2000 words in a conversation, so long stories aren't an option. However I've just spent $1.5k to order some more powerful hardware which should arrive in a week, which will give the ability to train some of these models to be more ABDL focused (with something like 14 years of captions and stories to pull from), though these language models are in a much better starting position than the image models for that. The new hardware will also massively help with the image models, where I've been leaving my computer training for weeks at a time and not able to do much else, and where it currently takes forever to start over to fix mistakes or try new things.
Baby325
2023-04-11 05:53:15 +0000 UTC