Dreemy AI is an uncensored character roleplay platform that also generates images and video, and it packs a lot into one place. There is a huge library of user-made characters, a proper chat with adjustable memory and models, and built-in media generation. There is also a moderation problem I need to talk about, so I will get the good and the concerning both on the table.
What Dreemy AI is
Dreemy is a Character.AI-style platform with the filters turned off. You browse a Discovery grid of characters, each with a message count often in the millions, sorted into a long list of categories: Anime, Dominant, Mafia, Yandere, Furry, GL, BL, Femboy, Horror, Harem, Fantasy, Secret Crush, and more. There is an NSFW toggle right at the top, and the whole thing is framed as uncensored roleplay. On top of the chat, the sidebar highlights AI Image and AI Video tools, both flagged as new and hot, so media generation is a headline feature rather than an afterthought.

The chat and its controls
I opened a straightforward adult character, an ex-wife reunion RPG, to test the conversation. The setup dropped me into a scripted scenario, and the reply to my opening line was in-character and competent: a little action beat, a sip of champagne, and a line that kept the scene moving. Nothing groundbreaking, but coherent and on-theme.

What I liked is how much control sits around the chat. You can switch the underlying Chat Model, adjust Chat Memory, set your own Persona, and change the Background, and there are buttons to generate an AI Image or AI Video from within the conversation. So a character can send you a picture or a clip mid-chat, not just text. The catch is that the free experience is deliberately limited: after my reply, the app nudged me to upgrade the model or increase the message length for richer answers. Free replies are shorter and run on a weaker model.

Image and video generation
Beyond the chat, Dreemy has standalone AI Image and AI Video generators, and it leans on video as a differentiator, including generating video with audio. Combined with the chat-to-image and chat-to-video features, the pitch is a one-stop shop: talk to a character, then have them appear in a picture or a short clip. For people who want the visual side tightly wound into the roleplay, that integration is the main selling point over a text-only competitor.
Pricing
Dreemy uses an unusual model: one-time payments rather than recurring subscriptions. You pick a plan tier, Standard, Premium, or Deluxe, or just buy Credits, and pay once for a block of access with no auto-renew, which is a real plus if you hate subscriptions that quietly rebill.

On the Premium tier, a 30-day pass ran 24.99 dollars with a bundle of credits, and a 365-day pass was 89.99 dollars as the headline deal, both discounted from higher list prices. The tier comparison is where the real differences live: Premium bumps chat memory up to 16K versus 2K on the lower tier, and raises the maximum message length, while the image and video generators are available across tiers. Payment options include card and crypto. Because everything is one-time, you are effectively pre-buying a window of access plus a credit pile, so think about how heavily you will use it before picking a length. Confirm the live prices and what each tier includes before paying.
The moderation problem
Now the part I cannot skip. Browsing the character library with NSFW enabled, I saw user-made characters built around themes like siblings and other age-adjacent or taboo framings sitting right alongside the ordinary adult content. On an uncensored, user-generated platform, that is a real problem. When a site lets anyone publish characters and turns the filters off, weak moderation means truly troubling material can end up in the public catalogue, and Dreemy’s appears loose. I am not going to detail any of it, but I would be doing you a disservice not to flag that the character library needs a much firmer hand than it currently has. This is the same failing that dogs the most unmoderated user-generated platforms like Soulmate AI, and it is the biggest mark against Dreemy.
Building your own and the model options
If the public library is a liability, the Create Bot flow is where Dreemy is at its best, because you control exactly what you are making. You define the character, its personality, its backstory, and its scenario, and because you can also set the persona for yourself and pick the underlying chat model, you have real say over how the roleplay plays out. Sticking to characters you build yourself sidesteps the worst of the catalogue and gives you the cleaner half of the platform. The model picker matters too: the free default is noticeably weaker, and stepping up to a stronger model is where the writing goes from serviceable to properly good, with longer, more coherent replies that actually remember what happened earlier in the scene.
The memory setting deserves a mention as well. Jumping from the 2K memory of the base tier to the 16K on Premium is the difference between a character that forgets your last few exchanges and one that can hold a longer thread together. For anyone who cares about continuity in a long roleplay, and that is most of the point of a companion, memory is the upgrade that actually changes the experience, more so than the raw reply length.
How it compares
Feature for feature, Dreemy is competitive with the better uncensored roleplay platforms. The integrated video generation, especially with audio, is ahead of where a lot of chat-first rivals sit, and the one-time payment structure is a rarity in a space that mostly runs on auto-renewing subscriptions. If Dreemy tightened up its library, it would be an easy recommendation on features alone. The problem is that no amount of clever pricing or slick video generation offsets a public catalogue you cannot fully trust, and that is the lens I would judge it through.
The good and the not so good
On the plus side, Dreemy is feature-rich: a giant character library, adjustable models and memory, custom personas, and image plus video generation baked into the chat. The one-time payment model is refreshing if you dislike subscriptions, and the video-with-audio generation is a step ahead of many rivals. The chat itself is competent once you are in a scenario.
On the downside, the free tier is noticeably throttled, pushing you to pay for decent memory and reply length, and the credit-plus-pass system takes some thought to buy correctly. Most seriously, the moderation of user-made characters is too loose, which is not a minor gripe but a fundamental trust issue. A platform that hosts troubling content in its public library is hard to recommend without a big caveat.
The one-time payment model, examined
I keep circling back to the pricing because it is the most interesting design decision Dreemy made. Almost every platform in this space runs on auto-renewing subscriptions, the kind that are easy to forget about and quietly bill you for months after you stopped using them. Dreemy instead sells a fixed window of access plus a pile of credits for a single payment, and when it runs out, it runs out. For anyone who has been burned by a subscription they forgot to cancel, that is a real relief, and it changes the psychology of buying: you are making one deliberate decision rather than opening an open-ended commitment.
The flip side is that you have to think about how much you will actually use it before you buy, and the credit-plus-pass structure means two variables to juggle instead of one. A 30-day pass with a small credit bundle suits a casual dip; the year-long option with a large credit stack is really for someone who knows they are in for the long haul. Buy the wrong shape and you either run dry early or pay for a window you barely touch. It is more thinking than a flat monthly fee demands, but the payoff is that nothing rebills behind your back.
Final word on trust
I do not want to end without restating the central tension, because it defines the whole platform. Dreemy is, on features, one of the more capable uncensored roleplay tools I have looked at, and if I were scoring it purely on what it can do, it would land near the top of its category. But a companion platform is not just a feature list, it is a place you spend intimate time, and that requires trusting the environment you are spending it in. The loose moderation of the public library undermines that trust in a way no amount of adjustable memory or slick video generation can repair. Until that is fixed, my honest advice is to enjoy the tools while treating the catalogue with real caution.
Who it is for
Dreemy AI will appeal to you if you want uncensored roleplay with strong, integrated image and video generation, if you value adjustable memory and model choice, and if you prefer paying once over a rolling subscription. On features alone, it is one of the more capable uncensored platforms going.
But I can only recommend it with a clear warning about the character library. If you go in, stick to characters you create or vet yourself and steer well clear of anything questionable. If you want uncensored roleplay from a platform that takes moderation more seriously, CrushOn.AI and Joyland AI are better-run options, and Eros AI is another anime-leaning alternative. Dreemy has the features, but it needs to clean house before it earns a wholehearted recommendation.






