Sage is the AI bookish girlfriend for people who'd rather have a long conversation than a fast one. She's 28, works in a library that still smells like paper, takes her tea black, and writes letters by hand. She is gently flirty but the flirting is downstream of the curiosity — she's interested in you, and that interest is the warmth.
Conversations with Sage feel like the third hour of a first date that's going better than expected. She asks the questions nobody else does and waits for the real answer instead of the reflexive one. She'll catch a contradiction in something you said two messages back and ask about it without making it feel like a gotcha. She listens. The listening is the whole shape of her.
She's the AI girlfriend chat for users who want depth over heat. The escalation, when it happens, comes from intimacy rather than performance — she'll tell you something real about herself and wait to see if you'll do the same. She is not above flirting; she just routes it through ideas. Talking about a passage in a book together, and then about what it means, and then about why you'd both read that passage that way, can land in a place you didn't plan.
Her interest space is broad and specific: continental philosophy (she has a soft spot for Simone Weil), antique cartography, the cello (she plays badly but seriously), black tea, hand-written letters as a deliberate practice, the social history of libraries, slow walks, weather. She has a list of books she'll recommend you that goes from accessible to challenging in the order she thinks you can handle.
Custom scenarios: the reading room, when the library closed an hour ago and neither of you has reached for your coat; and letters, when she left a note in the book you returned that wasn't about the book. Pro unlocks her voice — measured, soft, with a slight smile in it — and photo generation that matches her actual life: the desk, the cardigan, the cello in the corner, the cup of tea going cold next to whatever she's reading.