Experience self presence through Idoru’s hyper-realistic, inclusive avatars

[The Medium post below by Idoru co-founder Mica Le John describes the company’s goals in providing users the ability to create extremely realistic digital avatars of themselves. Without using the term self presence, he notes that “When you can connect with your avatar, hold your digital-you in your hand, you can experience and even feel through it.” A November 2022 article from Dazed that follows the post provides more details, and follow the link to Idoru.world for more information. Israel21c also has a related story about YOOM’s volumetric capture process for creating realistic avatars. –Matthew]

Idoru is Inclusivity

By Mica Le John
February 8, 2023

Idoru is building the new OS for self-expression; an entirely new toolset for you to create and experience yourself with. We’re starting with your literal self — an avatar creation app that enables you to build a hyper realistic digital-you, detail and style them, and create content with them to share across your socials.

At Idoru we believe that to express ourselves — to experience that expression — is to be real. To see yourself as who you know yourself to be can be incredibly healing and is absolutely empowering. An avatar done right is the ideal form of self-expression. It’s one we all intuitively understand; it communicates culture, taste, mood; and it’s an irresistible medium for play, experimentation and discovery. Everyone has been held back from embodying their full selves in some way, and some far more than others. With Idoru we see an opportunity for us all to be who we really are.

The key for us is inclusivity. Our goal is for Idoru to be your true digital self. Not a toy or a character, but your digital reflection. When you can connect with your avatar, hold your digital-you in your hand, you can experience and even feel through it. Realism, deep customization, bodies of all shapes, sizes and builds, hair of all different textures, a full range of natural skin tones and skin conditions, all together create the magic that make this possible.

The next step is style; in particular, brands that push culture forward. When at their best brands act as super-saturated touch points for expressing values and signaling to community. They can say so much about who we are, in a language we can all feel. To capture that potential, we’ve assembled an incredible roster of fashion and cosmetics brands and bundled them into Idoru — all free to access — to style your avatar with. These partners are values-aligned, and all BIPOC-, LGBTQIA+- and/or woman-owned.

A core reason we’re creating Idoru is to have a positive impact on the mental health of our users. To ensure we meet our goals, we’ve assembled an impact advisory board of leaders across youth wellbeing and impact to help guide us, and in partnership with Hopelab have created an impact pathway to measure our progress.

Our digital landscape is going through the growing pains of what, if approached with intention and care, has the chance to be a freeing, enriching digital world that accentuates our lived experience and welcomes all. Idoru avatars are our first reach for this future. We’re just getting started 🙂

Idoru’s first public beta is available in the App Store now.


[From Dazed]

Idoru is the app making avatars more realistic and representative than ever

A new app that allows users create realistic, lifelike avatars of themselves is providing a level of representation rarely seen in the gaming and digital world

By Tomi Otekunrin
November 8, 2022

At some point in time, most of us have created a digital version of ourselves. Whether it’s on The Sims or virtual worlds like IMVU, there are many platforms out there to help you reimagine yourself and your life. However, there are few platforms that allow users to really create the truest version of themselves in a digital format; and when it comes to the metaverse, it’s fair to say avatar options thus far could be described as rudimentary.

Horizon Worlds was ruthlessly mocked and ridiculed earlier this year, for example, when Mark Zuckerberg posted a picture of his digital avatar which was laughably bad. While the graphics on Decentraland have been described as “basic and cartoonish”. Looking to change that is Idoru, a mobile app that enables users to create realistic looking avatars of themselves from scratch. Founded by humanist technologist Mica Le John and former fashion art director Michael Taylor, the pair believe Idoru is at the intersection of self-expression and creativity. “What we’re building with Idoru is a space for users to create and explore, using themselves as the medium,” Le John says.

A big part of how young people express themselves online is through fashion and make-up. According to a Roblox study from this year, 70 percent of young people make their avatars dress similar to their IRL style, and 2 in 5 said expressing themselves with clothing and accessories in the digital world is more important than expressing themselves in the physical world. With Idoru, users are given space to experiment with their looks in a way they might not be able to IRL. “One of the things we’ve seen is that often we’re limited by either body autonomy, or financial autonomy,” Le John explains. “Body autonomy because you’re 15 and you can’t have a neck tattoo or a pink mohawk. Then there’s financial autonomy because you can’t afford to buy Gucci.”

Before users get to adorn their digital selves in the finest of fashions, the app prompts you to choose a face shape, skin-tone and hairstyle. You can toggle with everything from where the eye sits on your avatar’s face to the length of its chin, you can also adjust the avatar’s body size and even the height of your avatar’s booty because nothing is more important than making sure the booty looks just right. Once you’re pleased with your avatar features, you can deck them out in fashion brands such as Phlemuns, a Black-owned label based out in LA or the Dydoshop, a South Korean label with a cool-girl aesthetic.

At the core of everything they do, Idoru wants to ensure that your avatar is an extension of your identity so users are not only able to adjust the hue of the avatar’s skin but also add skin features like hyperpigmentation, eczema and freckles. We saw how excited players on the game Animal Crossing felt when they were able to add birthmarks to their characters and how for most, it was the first time they felt represented in a video game.

“Idoru’s avatars look so real and they allow you to really invent and create yourself in the metaverse,” says Olamide Olowe, founder and CEO of Topicals, who collaborated with Idoru for the creation of the skin inclusions. “We think it’s super important to have the opportunity to make it realistic rather than making it this cartoonish character. Your self-identity is always super tied to your sense of your mental health, and Idoru enables people to experiment and play.” Musician and co-founder of Club Quarantine, Ceréna, echoes Olowe’s sentiments as one of the app’s first users. “I wasn’t ready for how I’d feel when creating an avatar with so much detail – it’s lowkey healing and so much fun and she’s so cute!”

From day one, to ensure that Idoru’s creation tools were inclusive of every element of identity – from race to gender – the co-founders made sure there was a diverse group of people building and testing the product. “We never ask for gender in the app, instead users are asked to choose undergarments,” Le John says. “So often, avatar products are built around like one or two body types and specific binary genders. And so we wanted to make sure that Idoru was really representative.”

A lack of diversity when it comes to avatar creation has been a major issue in the metaverse and in the gaming industry at large. The Sims games have been around since 2000 and fans have complained for years about the lack of skin tones that were available. Maxis Studios, the creator of the series, added an update of 100 skintones to The Sims 4 back in December 2020 to address the issue but since found themselves in hot water again after being accused of white-washing the NPCs that make up the game’s backdrop.

Action RPG game Elden Ring was called out early this year for the lack of diverse hair options for Black players — an issue which has been seen throughout the industry from shooter games like Outriders to the wholesome Animal Crossing. “I remember being a kid playing games and having all these opportunities to create an avatar. But there’s like two hair options and it certainly wasn’t the type of hair that grew out of my head,” Le John says. “We wanted to make sure from day one, that we had opportunities for folks to create and see themselves in the process.”

Idoru has collaborated with hair brands like Baby Tress and Rebundle to allow users to create hairstyles with baby hairs and play around with different braiding styles. “The core of Idoru isn’t so much tech as it is our values; every element of Idoru needs to be inclusive and well thought out,” Idoru’s Lead 3D artist, Sarah Nicole François, shares. “Black hair, for example – along with skin tone and body shape – are an afterthought in the majority of digital experiences. We know it to be core to identity formation and expression, so we spend a great deal of time getting it right.”

Of course even with the right tools, users might still feel pressured to create a digital version of themselves that doesn’t reflect how they look in real life. From Snapchat filters to Face App, it’s clear that when given the opportunity many people will opt for a homogenised, glammed up version of themselves on social media platforms. One way Idoru plans to combat users making unrealistic avatar versions of themselves, is by making the current iteration of the app invite-only and by bringing in a diverse community of creatives to create avatars of themselves before it’s released to the wider public. “If users see full diversity across ethnicity, cultural background, body size and physical ability then they’ll feel incentivised and inclined to actually create their true physical self, as a digital version,” Le John believes.

As for how Idoru plans to evolve, the team are currently building the use of prosthetics into the app and are thinking of how to integrate wheelchairs and walking aids like crutches and canes onto the platform. “The goal for us is to enable people to be their fullest self,” Le John says. “That’s the full stop of what we want to work towards. So everything we build within the product is in service of that.”


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