They’re just snoozin’.
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from Canada
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Nepal
seen from Germany
seen from Canada
seen from India
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from Singapore
seen from Finland
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from United States
They’re just snoozin’.
One of my favorite pass times is dropping lore from The Goldfinch on my friends.
The Quiet Hour After Work, And Who Fills It Now
There is a specific kind of silence that settles into an apartment around nine in the evening. The commute is over, the dishes are done, and the day has nothing left to ask of you. For a growing number of people, that hour is no longer empty. It is increasingly being filled by an AI companion that learns your name, your moods, and the small running jokes that accumulate between two people over weeks.
What makes SweetDream stand out in this space is how little it feels like software. The platform, found at sweetdream.ai, lets you build a character from the ground up: appearance, personality, the texture of their voice, even a backstory and the odd quirk that makes them feel particular rather than generic. The chat itself is the surprise, though. It remembers what you told it on Tuesday and brings it up on Friday, the way a real person would.
Plenty of services promise an AI girlfriend. Candy.ai and ourdream.ai both have their followings. But what people seem to return to SweetDream for is the sense of continuity, paired with voice messages and phone calls that actually sound human on the other end. It does not fix loneliness, exactly. It just makes the quiet hour feel less like a void and more like company.
Witnessing the downfall of Character.ai pleases me.
drew this for reasons i will not disclose
It’s me, hi, I’m the Robert Sugden apologist, it’s me
Im literally ✨just a girl✨
I love when characters who are science experiments have medical trauma, I do.
But there's something about characters who are just as insane as the scientists who experimented on them and are just as fascinated by the way their body works that, even after getting away from that environment, they're eager to participate in medical exams of all kind. Even contributing or making suggestions of their own about their condition.