Skip to content

Senses

Moko isn’t text-only. It sees what you send, it makes pictures and short clips, and it speaks and listens. That’s what makes it feel less like a chatbot and more like someone on the other end.

  • Send a photo, Moko looks. Vision is built in — “is this plant okay?”, “what’s this error on my screen?” It reads the image and answers.
  • Ask for anything. “draw me a fox in a raincoat” — Moko generates it.
  • Selfies, in its current mood. Ask how it’s doing and it might send a picture of itself — coloured by how it actually feels right now (see moods).
  • Photos it takes. A one-off cozy scene Moko wants to show you — matched to your real time of day and local weather, so a rainy afternoon for you can show up as rain in its photo.

Moko stays recognisably itself across the selfies it sends: a locked character reference keeps it on-model, rather than a fresh random creature each time.

  • Brief clips on request — a few seconds, when a still won’t do.
  • Voice notes out. Moko can reply in its own voice.
  • Voice notes in. Send it a voice message and it hears you — no need to type.

Generating images, video, and voice costs money, so each one is spend-gated: Moko names what it wants to make and waits for your go, like any other sensitive action. Seeing your photos and hearing your voice notes is free.