A detailed Nano Banana 2 prompt is turning selfies, characters, and celebrities into glossy 3D chibi figurines while preserving identity cues. Use it for merch mockups, avatar packs, or toy-style concept sheets that need consistent faces and outfits.

The useful part here is the level of constraint. In the main post, the prompt specifies not just “3D chibi figurine,” but a full rendering stack: soft studio lighting, subtle ambient occlusion, gentle shadows, clean reflections, smooth vinyl or plastic surfaces, centered framing, and a seamless white background. That gives the results a merch-mockup look instead of a loose cartoon conversion.
It also bakes in consistency guards. The companion post adds negative prompts against photoreal skin, gritty textures, messy backgrounds, broken anatomy, horror styling, and metallic robot looks. The instructions to keep the original identity, outfit, and pose are what make this more useful for avatar packs, concept sheets, or toy-style character lineups than a generic “cuteify” prompt.
The first wave is personal and fandom-driven. One creator’s short video turns the idea into a social remix, showing a waving, sparkling chibi self-portrait, while the original examples include recognizable fantasy characters whose robes, glasses, hair, and props survive the toy conversion.
The broader range matters. A later example post applies the same recipe to celebrities, villains, and game heroes, and the outputs still read like a coherent collectible series because the white-background product-shot setup stays fixed while faces, costumes, and accessories do the differentiating. A supporting example shows the same style dropped into a scene with multiple figures, suggesting the look can extend beyond isolated turnarounds into toy-line concept art.
Creators are treating Nano Banana prompts like reusable specs, from PromptsRef's 400-plus library to JSON selfie templates, Leonardo night-flash recipes, and Notion-style icon packs. Keep the structure and swap the variables if you want repeatable style systems instead of one-off hits.
releaseTopview added Seedance 2.0 to Agent V2, pairing multi-scene generation with a storyboard timeline and Business Annual access billed as 365 days of unlimited generations. That moves longform video workflows toward editable sequences instead of stitched clips.
workflowCreators are moving from V8 calibration complaints to darker film-still scenes, fashion shots, and worldbuilding tests, with ECLIPTIC remakes showing stronger depth and lighting. Retest saved SREF recipes if you rely on V8 for cinematic ideation.
workflowA shared workflow converts GTA-style stills into photoreal images with Nano Banana 2, then animates them in LTX-2.3 Pro 4K using detailed material, skin, vehicle, and camera prompts. Try it for trailer-style previsualization if you want more control at lower cost.
workflowShared Nano Banana 2 workflows now cover turnaround sheets, distinctive facial traits, and photoreal rerenders that keep the framing of a reference image. Use one prompt grammar for concept art, editorial portraits, and animation prep.
Turn any character into a 3D chibi figurine. Just upload the image and use the prompt below 👇
QT a chibi version of you 🥹🫶✨
Try the Grok Imagine chibi template! Create your chibi character, then animate with Grok Imagine! This was quite fun to do.
{ "prompt": "Transform the uploaded image into a cute 3D chibi vinyl figurine style character while preserving the original subject, identity, pose, clothing cues, and key visual traits. Convert the subject into an adorable stylized collectible toy aesthetic with an oversized Show more
From game characters to celebrities everything turns into a tiny 3D chibi figurine Prompt 👇
Turn any character into a 3D chibi figurine. Just upload the image and use the prompt below 👇