I’m having trouble getting the best images from Fantasy Ai. I feel like my prompts aren’t working or the results don’t match what I want. Can anyone give me tips or guide me on how to improve my Fantasy Ai results? Any settings or prompt suggestions would help a lot. Thanks in advance.
Honestly, it’s all about the prompt game. If you’re just typing “cool dragon” you’ll get whatever the algorithm spits out, but details are king. Try describing specific stuff: “an ancient gold-scaled dragon soaring over snowy mountains at sunrise, cinematic lighting, detailed wings, sharp focus, breathtaking atmosphere.” The more clear direction you give, the better. Use commas to separate descriptors, and avoid stacking random concepts unless you want weirdness.
Play around with styles, too: add stuff like “in the style of Greg Rutkowski” or “highly detailed digital painting.” Experiment with negative prompts if it supports them (“no text, no blurry faces, no dark backgrounds” etc) to filter out stuff you don’t want.
Also, make sure your settings aren’t set to something weird—sometimes tweaking steps, guidance, or resolution gives wildly different results. And check if you can choose different model versions (like choosing the “realistic” model versus “anime” or “fantasy art” models).
Last thing, don’t be afraid to remix your prompt, tweak words or order, and iterate. Sometimes what works one day falls flat the next run, so keep at it. Post your frustrating fails in the Fantasy Ai thread—everyone loves comparing weird outcomes!
Not gonna lie, I totally get where you’re coming from—Fantasy Ai can be the love-child of pure magic and facepalm disappointment, sometimes in the same render. Byteguru’s got the right idea with elaborate prompts, but honestly, sometimes piling adjectives feels like you’re just giving the algorithm a panic attack. There’s a fine line between “highly detailed epic scenic fantasy castle at sunset with moody lighting, 8K, photorealistic, symmetrical, trending on artstation” and “here’s a blender of every keyword you’ve seen on Reddit mashed into a dragon sausage.”
For me, the biggest hack hasn’t been endlessly stacking descriptors, but actually dialing things back once in a while. If your prompt’s going “epic dark wizard, fire, cyberpunk, Victorian, underwater, detailed, neon, pastel, pop art…,” you’ll confuse the model more than help it. Sometimes, less is more—give the AI room to fill in the blanks the way it’s trained, then go in for surgical edits after, like a chef who tastes as they season instead of carpet bombing the soup.
Pro tip: Check your reference images if Fantasy Ai lets you use ‘em. Drop in a vibe pic instead of rolling the dice with words alone. And about settings—sampling steps and CFG matters, but you gotta experiment. Higher CFG sometimes makes things weirder instead of better, so don’t max it out by default. Start with the defaults, find where it falls apart, then nudge up or down.
Burst mode: If it has “variation” or “batch” features, spam those. Run ten versions of the same prompt and you’ll notice patterns—sometimes Fantasy Ai just needs to get warmed up.
And, while Byteguru says post failures, I say—save them! Ugly babies become cool artists with a little editing. I literally had a goblin in a tutu come out once, and after cropping and upscaling, it’s my phone’s background.
Finally, if you aren’t getting results that match, try prompt surgery—ask for the opposite of what you want. Want bright? Say “not dark.” Want sharp? “No blur.” Fantasy Ai’s sometimes like a stubborn dog—sometimes you have to talk backwards.
Bottom line: prompt smarter, not longer. And use a ton of trial, error, and patience. Anyone who nails it first shot is lying or blessed by the AI gods… and their luck will run out, trust me.