PureFantasy leads with a familiar promise, create your dream AI girl, and backs it with a builder that is deeper than most. Instead of picking a premade character off a shelf, you walk through a multi-step wizard that shapes her look and persona before you ever start talking, and the platform pairs that with chat, image generation, and, on the top tier, video. I went hands-on with the creation flow and the pricing to see whether the build-her-yourself approach is worth the extra steps. It is an adults-only app, so treat this as your 18-plus warning up front.
Here is my take on how PureFantasy works, how deep the builder goes, and what it costs.

What PureFantasy actually is
PureFantasy is a browser-based AI girlfriend platform built around custom character creation. Rather than dropping you into a roster, it opens straight into a Create Your Dream AI Girl wizard, which tells you where the emphasis lies: this is a make-her-yourself app first, with chat and generation attached. The paid tiers confirm the feature set, listing custom characters, an image generator, all image models, chat, and, at the top, a video generator.
The creation flow is a step-by-step wizard with a progress bar of icons running across the top, covering style, appearance, hair, face, personality, and a final review. The first step is a style choice between Realistic and Anime, though Anime was marked Coming Soon when I visited, so for now the platform is realistic-only. That is worth knowing if anime is your thing, since the option is advertised but not yet live.
The interface itself is clean and dark, with a prominent Upgrade button in the corner as the only real distraction. There is no clutter, no wall of ads, just the wizard front and center, which fits an app that wants the act of building a character to feel like the main event rather than a chore you rush through to get to a paywall. That focus is a point in its favor, since plenty of these sites bury the creation flow under promotional noise.
The builder goes step by step
What sets PureFantasy apart is how methodically it walks you through building a character. After the style choice, the second step handles the physical basics: ethnicity, offered as African, Asian, Arab, or Caucasian, an age set with a slider, and a nationality dropdown. From there the wizard continues through hair, face, personality, and a final summary, so you are shaping the character one focused decision at a time rather than facing a single overwhelming form.
I like this approach. Breaking creation into discrete steps, each with its own screen, keeps every choice manageable and makes the process feel considered rather than like homework. It is the same instinct behind the better builders I have tested, like the multi-step flow on MyLovely AI, and it suits a platform whose whole pitch is that you design your companion rather than settle for a preset. The age slider defaulting to a clearly adult value is the responsible way to handle that setting, and as always with these tools, the only appropriate use is with clearly adult characters.
The later steps are where a builder like this earns its keep, moving past the physical into personality. The icon progression suggests the wizard covers hair and face in their own dedicated screens before reaching a personality step, which is the part that actually determines how your companion behaves in chat rather than just how she looks. A character that is only a face is a wallpaper. A character with a defined personality is someone you can have a conversation with, and the fact that PureFantasy gives personality its own step rather than folding it into an afterthought signals it takes the chat side seriously. The final review screen then lets you confirm everything before committing, which is a sensible way to avoid burning a generation on a character you did not mean to make.
The nationality dropdown alongside ethnicity is a nice touch of granularity, letting you specify beyond the four broad ethnicity buckets. Small options like that are what separate a builder that feels expressive from one that feels like a checkbox exercise. My only wish is that the roster side were stronger, since a build-first app can feel like a lot of upfront work when you just want to start talking to someone, but for people who enjoy the design process, the depth here is a genuine draw rather than a barrier.
Once the character is built, the platform’s other features come into play. Chat is included on every paid tier, so your custom girl is someone you can actually talk to, not just a static image. The image generator and all image models let you produce pictures of her, and on the top tier a video generator adds motion. So the builder is the front end to a fuller companion experience rather than a one-off character maker.
The all image models line on the pricing is a small but meaningful detail. It suggests PureFantasy runs more than one underlying image model and gives paid users access to all of them, which matters because different models produce different aesthetics, and being able to switch between them is how you dial in a look you like. Tied to a custom character, that means you can generate her across styles while keeping the same person, which is exactly the kind of consistency-plus-variety that makes a companion feel real rather than like a slideshow of strangers. Whether the chat writing holds up to the polish of the builder is something only extended hands-on time would confirm, but the structure, with chat included from the entry tier, at least puts conversation front and center rather than treating it as an upsell.
What PureFantasy costs
PureFantasy runs on a credit-based subscription with three tiers, a Monthly and Yearly toggle, and a steep 70 percent discount for paying annually. There was also a 20 percent off badge on each plan when I looked, which is the kind of standing discount these sites tend to keep running.

The tiers scale on credits and features. Standard is $11.99 a month for 1,000 credits and includes creating your own AI girlfriends, the image generator, all image models, custom character, chat, and faster response time. Premium is $19.99 a month and doubles you to 2,000 credits with the same feature list. Ultra is $31.99 a month for 4,000 credits and is the only tier that adds the video generator on top of everything else. So the jump to Ultra is really about two things: more credits and video, while chat and image generation are available from the entry tier up.
The structure is clear enough, and it is good that chat and image generation are not locked behind the priciest plan. The thing to weigh is that video, the flashiest feature, is Ultra-only at $31.99 a month, which is a meaningful step up, and that credits are how everything gets metered, so how far 1,000 or 2,000 credits stretch depends on per-action costs the plan cards do not spell out. If video is not a priority for you, Standard or Premium covers the core companion experience for a good deal less.
The 70 percent yearly discount is the lever to pay attention to if you decide you like it. Annual billing at that reduction changes the effective monthly cost significantly, so the real decision is not just which tier but whether you are confident enough to commit for a year up front. My usual caution applies: the standing 20 percent off badges and the big annual discount are permanent fixtures of how these sites price, designed to make any given moment feel like the right time to buy, so do not let the urgency rush you. Start monthly, confirm the app delivers, and switch to annual only once you know you will keep using it. The absence of a clearly free tier means you are committing at least $11.99 to properly try the chat and generation, which is a modest but real barrier to a no-cost test.
How it stacks up
PureFantasy’s strength is its builder. The step-by-step wizard is one of the more thoughtful creation flows in the category, and pairing it with chat and image generation from the entry tier makes for a coherent build-and-talk-to-her experience. Having video available, even if only on the top plan, adds range that not every competitor offers.
The limitations are worth noting. Anime is advertised but not yet available, so realistic is your only option for now. The reliance on a custom-build-first flow means there is less of an instant-gratification roster to browse if you would rather just start chatting with someone premade. And video being Ultra-only puts the most eye-catching feature behind the most expensive tier. If you want a big premade roster alongside creation, AiGirlfriends.ai and Secret Desires AI are worth comparing, and my virtual girlfriends guide lays out how these apps differ on builders, chat, and pricing.
Who PureFantasy is for
PureFantasy is a good pick if you enjoy the process of designing a companion from the ground up and want chat and image generation included from the entry tier. The builder is genuinely one of its strengths, the realistic output looks capable, and Standard at $11.99 is a reasonable starting price for the core experience.
It is a weaker pick if you want anime companions right now, since that style is not yet live, or if you would rather browse a ready-made roster than build from scratch, and the video generator being Ultra-only may push the price higher than you want if motion is a must-have. My advice: start on Standard to test the builder and the chat, and only move up to Ultra if you specifically want video. It is 18-plus, the creation flow is a real highlight, and for people who like designing their own companion it is one of the more satisfying builders in the space.






