Why we built this
Streamers, creators, and small communities have an identity problem: their channel deserves emotes that match the vibe of the space, but custom artwork costs $50–$200 per emote and takes weeks. Most people end up using generic stock or copy-pasting popular emotes that fit a hundred other channels.
Generative image models finally got good enough to do this in a minute, for the cost of a coffee. Emote Pack AI is the workflow layer on top — the catalog of expressions, the splitting, the alpha-trim, the size variants, the ZIP export — so the model output lands as actual usable emote files instead of a single grid you have to crop by hand.
How it works
- Upload any subject — a character, a mascot, a person, a pet. Clean backgrounds help; the chroma keyer handles the rest.
- Pick the expressions you want from the catalog: 227+ emotes across every mood category (happy, love, sad, angry, surprised, silly, action…). Or quick-pick the top 12 to start.
- Generate. Behind the scenes we render parallel grids, chroma-key the green backdrop, slice cells into 1024×1024 PNGs, auto-zoom each face/gesture, and stamp the focal transform.
- Fine-tune in the editor (drag, scale, rotate, flip per tile), pick a filename prefix/suffix, then download a single ZIP with every Discord and Twitch size in their own folder.
What we won't do
- We don't generate likenesses of real people without consent — see our Acceptable Use Policy.
- We don't sell or train models on your uploaded images. They stay in our private storage bucket, scoped to your account, and you can delete every trace with one button on the Profile page.
- We don't run ads or sell data. Subscriptions and one-time token packs are the only way we make money. See Pricing.
Who's behind it
Emote Pack AI is built and operated by a small independent team. Questions, feature requests, or "your generator broke for this one weird subject" reports? Email hello@emotepack.ai and a human will read it.
What's next
We're publicly tracking what we ship and what's coming next on the Changelog. The short list: animated emotes, Discord bot push, multi-subject packs, and shared workspaces for streaming orgs.