The Queenly Portrait maker is good for creating portrait-like images of female rulers. Some examples of what I made: here and here Some are completely impractical, but you should be able to work with most of them. The graphics are good and there's a wide selection of clothes, including both superhero costumes and regular modern outfits. It was intended to make X-Men OCs, but you can do a lot beyond that. The X-Girl maker is a fairly versatile female superhero creator.
It's good if you have a lot of female characters because you have a lot of options, but also annoying because there's more garbage to sift through. There are generally a lot more female creators than there are male, because girls in general play them more, I suppose. In regards to things like using their art on different websites or making adoptable characters, you should contact the artist before you do that. They are made by a variety of different artists, and of course, they all have different policies regarding what you can use their games for, but all seem to be in agreement that you shouldn't try to make money off of these games by selling your characters in any way. Also worth noting that the majority of them come from Azalea's Dolls, DollDivine, and Rinmaru Games (though there are some exceptions.) None of these are mine, and all were created by artists who have talents that I do not, lol.Īlso, disclaimer: it's probably a bad idea to try to use the characters you create in any of these games in any commercial products. Most of these are flash games, and none of them cost money. However, a lot of them are either very low-quality (bad images, faces or clothes being stolen from other products or artwork, annoying controls) or aimed at very young girls (plastic-y look, dumbed-down, no options other than pink fluffy dresses.) So I collected some that I thought would be useful. They're like dressup games or paper dolls, but fancier and more customizable. I mean, I probably could, but that takes time that I don't have and effort that I'm not willing to put in, so I'm not going to.Ī good solution to not being able to draw whatsoever is character creators/dollmakers/whatever you want to call them. Character customization will likely be expanded on in the inevitable Fallen Order sequel, though not much is known about a potential sequel at this time.Drawing is hard. The system isn't perfect - something players will notice after unlocking their 20th poncho - but the depth of the lightsaber creation is precisely what fans want.
Despite having such little impact on gameplay, customizing Cal Kestis and his lightsaber is the highlight of the game. That's about it for character customization in Jedi: Fallen Order.
Starting a New Game+ file unlocks a special dark side outfit that would be too big of a spoiler to detail here, but is a must-have for any fan that feels limited by the story's focus on the light side. Fallen Order even has a bonus outfit for Cal to wear, and no, it's not a poncho. There is a red option for players looking to join the dark side, but it's reserved for a "New Game+" save file after the game has already been completed. Players can choose from blue, green, yellow, orange, purple, magenta, indigo and cyan. Of course, everybody wants to choose their lightsaber color, and the game doesn't slack there either.