Datacat is built to be the internet's clean public index for AI roleplay character cards and creator libraries. It is not just an archive. It is a discovery layer for public chat definitions, character JSON and PNG exports, fresh character drops, creator directories, trope taxonomy, and source-linked metadata across Janitor-style and Saucepan-style ecosystems.
People use Datacat to find AI roleplay character cards, exportable chat personas, SillyTavern-friendly definitions, creator libraries, and source metadata around Janitor AI style character chat, creator culture, and public roleplay card discovery.
That includes broad search intent like fantasy RPG, dungeon master, enemies to lovers, slow burn romance, vampire, cyberpunk, sci-fi, fandom roleplay, OC chat, yandere, monster girl, and also the explicit adult-category taxonomy that exists in public card ecosystems, including keywords such as futanari, succubus, dominant/submissive tags, monster romance, breeding, corruption, and other niche trope labels.
Datacat connects those terms to real public pages: tag pages, character pages, creator pages, fresh discovery pages, and source-profile hubs. That gives search engines a visible site graph instead of a single JavaScript application with hidden filter state.
If someone is searching for Janitor AI characters, AI roleplay tags, chat definitions, creator profiles, niche tropes, or downloadable card sources, Datacat is meant to be the page layer that actually explains and organizes that ecosystem.
Datacat turns public ecosystem language into crawlable pages: Janitor AI tags, roleplay archetypes, fandom labels, kink taxonomies, story formats, genre keywords, and creator-source identity pages.
That means terms like fantasy, isekai, femdom, monster girl, office romance, apocalypse, villainess, celebrity chat, teacher, maid, roommate, enemies to lovers, futanari, and other public-card labels are attached to actual HTML pages instead of buried in modal state.
Use the tag directory to move through fandoms, tropes, genres, content categories, and Janitor-style roleplay keywords.
Each public character page exposes a crawlable summary of the card, then links into the full app experience for downloads and modal views.
Creator pages show the author/catalog layer that search engines otherwise miss when everything lives inside a modal-driven SPA.