Gemma Prompt tool update - 15 animation pre-sets, Pov mode male/female - many bug files...
The update fixes critical crashes, adds SpongeBob and Rick and Morty styles, and introduces a first-person camera mode.
The Gemma Prompt Tool, a popular interface for running local AI models like Llama, has launched a substantial v2.0 update focused on stability and creative control. The release tackles long-standing technical headaches: it fixes the llama-server boot crash by auto-finding or installing the executable, prevents vision model (mmproj) files from crashing text-only sessions, and resolves CUDA detection issues, confirming compatibility with newer hardware like the RTX 5090. A new three-method interrupt system also makes the pipeline more responsive.
Creatively, the update is a powerhouse. A new Animation Preset system offers 15 distinct styles—from SpongeBob SquarePants and Rick and Morty to Shrek and LEGO Batman—each injecting show-accurate character descriptions and visual style tags at the top of the system prompt. The new POV Mode (Male/Female) shifts the camera to a first-person perspective, describing body sensations and keeping hands in frame. Furthermore, the dialogue system now auto-detects modes like 'Singing' or 'ASMR' and enforces specific output rules, demanding actual lyrics or whispered quotes instead of vague descriptions.
- Fixed critical stability bugs: llama-server boot crashes, CUDA detection failures, and token-burning in 'thinking' mode.
- Added 15 animation presets including SpongeBob, Rick and Morty, and Shrek, with style-locking system prompts.
- Introduced a first-person POV camera mode and an overhauled dialogue system that enforces specific output formats.
Why It Matters
This makes local AI image/video generation significantly more reliable and unlocks precise, consistent cinematic styles for creators.