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Roleplay setup guide

The Roleplay Setup is where you choose what kind of practice you want, create or generate a scenario, and start the simulation with your AI partner.

Updated this week

In every helping profession - coaching, healthcare, supervision, financial advising, education - there are conversations that require care, clarity, and presence. Some are routine; others are delicate. You may be preparing to navigate resistance, deliver feedback, address heightened emotions, support a client through uncertainty, or guide someone through change.

In the Roleplay Setup space you can choose the type of practice you want, shape the scenario, and begin a guided simulation with your AI agent.

This article walks you through what each option means and how to use it effectively.


1. Choosing the type of practice

At the top of the window, you select how you want the roleplay to unfold. Each option serves a different stage of reflective practice.

a) Practice the Skill

This mode places you in the central role.
You take the seat you would hold in real life - coach, clinician, advisor, supervisor - and the AI agent responds as the other person in the scenario.

You learn by doing.

b) See me demonstrate the skill

This mode is observational.
The AI agent demonstrates the skill within a realistic scenario so you can watch the application of professional communication in context.

You learn by seeing.


2. Creating or choosing a scenario

Scenario defines the relationship, context, challenges, and goals of the conversation you want to practice.

You have two paths:

a) Create a scenario or generate a new one

Creating a scenario is ideal when you have a real or realistic conversation you want to explore.

You might describe:

  • A client who has become disengaged

  • A patient struggling to follow a care plan

  • An employee needing feedback

  • A colleague resisting collaboration

  • A family or financial client feeling anxious or overwhelmed

Write as much or as little as you like. Even brief descriptions will generate a meaningful simulation, but more detail helps the AI agent behave with greater realism.

Experienced practitioners often use this option to rework a conversation that didn’t go as planned - or to prepare for one that feels high-stakes.

If you want to practice but don’t have a specific situation in mind, you can select Generate new scenario.

These scenarios:

  • Are tailored to the specific skill you are developing

  • Include enough detail to feel authentic, not generic

  • Clearly identify your role and the AI partner’s role

  • Reflect professional situations relevant to coaching, care, guidance, or advisory work

b) Choose a recent scenario

You can also choose from recent scenarios to continue practicing or explore a conversation from different angles.


3. Select your AI conversation partner

The “Roleplay with:” menu assigns a randomized human name to your AI agent.

This small detail serves an important purpose:
It helps the simulation feel like a real interaction with a person - not an abstract exercise.

Your clients, patients, or colleagues all bring their own humanity into the room. Using a realistic name reinforces the relational quality of the roleplay and anchors you in the interpersonal dynamics you are practicing.

Names rotate for each new roleplay to keep the experience fresh and immersive.


4. Start the simulation

Once everything is set:

  1. Click Start

  2. The roleplay begins immediately

  3. You interact as you would in a real conversation - speaking or typing

  4. The AI agent responds in turn, with the personality and context defined by the scenario

  5. Afterward, you can review, reflect, and continue practicing as needed

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