Wait, Mio.2 Agent Can Do That? Fun New Ways to Play, from Visual Novels to Character Cards

Explore the new possibilities of Mio.2 Agent—from visual novel–style experiences to character setting cards. This article shows you how to combine narrative expression with character development to create richer and more engaging creative approaches.

Mio.2 has already helped so many creators turn a half-formed idea into a finished visual in minutes, and people keep finding new things to do with it.

Around the community, we’ve seen folks mock up visual novel screenshots, build character cards for their original characters, and even use it as a full-blown poster design tool.

The results look completely different, but they all come down to the same trick: pulling image and text together into one carefully designed layout.

So we’ve rounded up a few of the community’s favorite image-and-text ideas. Hopefully one of them sparks your next piece!

Mio.2 創作示例 1
Album Covers
Mio.2 創作示例 2
Character Cards
Mio.2 創作示例 3
Visual Novel Screenshots

Way 1: Visual Novel Screenshots

Visual novels are one of the most popular things people are making right now.

Beyond the character and the background, Mio.2 can add nameplates, dialogue boxes, story text, even branching choice menus, so the whole frame actually reads like a scene.

If you write original stories, build out worlds, or love sketching game concepts, it’s a fast way to show off your plot and how your characters connect.

Visual Novel Screenshot 1
Visual Novel Screenshot 2
Example prompt
A polished visual-novel-style screenshot.
Scene: a near-empty campus library at sunset. Outside the windows, the sky fades from orange to deep blue, and the tall glass catches the room's soft lamplight. Two desks are pushed together, cluttered with thick textbooks and a few pens. A retro desk lamp throws a warm glow and a long shadow across the floor. The air smells of old paper, quiet in the way only libraries are.
Character: a girl with ash-blonde hair in a soft, messy bun, a few strands loose around her face. She's in an oversized white knit sweater, the collar slipping to bare one delicate collarbone. Big, bright, lively eyes. Chin in her hands, she gazes out at the sunset, then turns at the sound of a voice, eyes crinkling into a warm smile, a light blush on her cheeks.
Character name: Elena Montgomery
Dialogue: "Oh, this one? It's honestly pretty easy. See, look here... Hm? Why am I studying so hard? ...I guess because I want to get into the same university as you."
Overall style: Japanese visual-novel UI.

Branching Choices

劇情分支 1
劇情分支 2
Example prompt
Background: a roadside vending machine under a bright, saturated anime sky, big cotton-candy thunderheads building on the horizon. Sunlight filters through the leafy street trees and dapples the asphalt gold.
Dialogue box at the bottom: The afternoon downpour has stopped as suddenly as it came. Wiping her forehead with the back of her hand, she presses a frosty, just-bought bottle of ramune to my cheek with a soft "tap." The cold snaps me back, and she grins and winks: "So, where should we explore next?"
Three choices:
1. Up to the secret base on the hill
2. I'll grab you a shaved ice
3. Just head home
Overall style: Japanese game UI.

Way 2: Character Cards

Character cards are another format a lot of creators are playing with.

Instead of just posting the character art on its own, a card gathers the name, backstory, abilities, and other details in one place, so the character feels fully fleshed out.

It’s a great fit for an original character, someone from a novel, a game character, or a VTuber persona.

Character Card 1
Character Card 2
Example prompt
Make me a character card.
Character name: Lilith Blake
Age: 117 (just came of age in the Demon Realm, about 17 in human years; loves telling fans she's "forever 17")
Occupation: trainee pastry chef at the human-world dessert shop "Sugar & Spell" / runaway apprentice archmage from the Demon Realm

Way 3: Image-and-Text Posters

That same knack for laying out image and text works just as well for posters.

Event promos, work reveals, community announcements, holiday art: you can put any of them together just by chatting with Mio.2. Whether you’re hyping an event or dropping a new track, it’s a quick way to make something that actually looks designed.

Poster Example 1
Example prompt
Design a summer event poster.
Title: Summer Festival 2026
Subtitle: Let's make the most of midsummer together
Overall style: fresh, cool blues
Blend the text into the background naturally, with a stylized display title and decorative type. 4:3
圖文海報示例 2
Example prompt
A polished Japanese-anime VTuber stream-announcement poster, all dreamy, sweet, magical-teatime charm. Front and center: a cute twin-tailed girl with caramel hair and ruby-red eyes, in a magical maid outfit, smiling right at the camera. Glowing spellbooks and dainty desserts float around her. Soft warm lighting, bright and airy colors. Put the text along the top and down the left side:
[Main title]
LIVE STREAM / Stream Confirmed!
[Stream time]
2026.07.05 (Sun) 20:00
[Stream topic]
✦ Debut Intern Stream ✦
Welcome to the witch's dessert shop!
[Hashtags]
#LilithLive #DebutStream

Landscape layout, flawless quality. 16:9

Album Covers and Lyric Cards

Beyond promo posters, you can push into more design-heavy pieces too.

Album Cover Example
Example prompt
Design a music album cover.
Title: Neon Solitude
Style: City Pop & Vaporwave
Artist: Miku & The Nightwalkers
Include a stylized display title and decorative type

Getting Mio.2 to Nail Your Layout

For the best results, spell out exactly what text you want and how the layout should come together.

For example:

  • Name the exact title text
  • Say where the text should sit
  • Describe the dialogue-box style
  • Set the poster’s look
  • Call out the font mood

If the first result isn’t quite right, just keep refining it in follow-up messages.

For example:

· Make the title bigger
· Add a subtitle
· Make the title English
· Give it a magazine-cover look
· Make the text more designed

A few rounds back and forth usually get you exactly what you pictured.

Make Your First Image-and-Text Piece

From visual novel screenshots to character cards to posters, more and more creators are exploring what’s possible with Mio.2.

If you haven’t tried it yet, grab one of the prompts above and make your very first image-and-text piece.

And when you do, share it with the community. Trade inspiration with other creators and discover even more fun ways to play!

Index