☆ ╭ ❝ @name ❞ • song + artist !! ╰ ★ sexuality . mbti . timezone
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Loading pageThe #template aesthetic is for people who want a profile that looks put together from the very first line. Whether it's a structured bio layout, a matching symbol set, or a reusable format that keeps everything cohesive, templates are what separate intentional profiles from accidental ones.
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☆ ╭ ❝ @name ❞ • song + artist !! ╰ ★ sexuality . mbti . timezone
╭ @𝙪𝙨𝙚𝙧𝙣𝙖𝙢𝙚 ♡‧₊˚ ┆❝ proノnouns ❞ ┆⋆˚ 🎞️ ˖° 𝙖𝙜𝙚 ╰ ➤ ᥫ᭡ fav things.
🍰 ⵌ﹕name ﹕˃ᴗ˂
You've reached the bottom of the ocean (3 vibes)
The #template aesthetic is for people who want a profile that looks put together from the very first line. Whether it's a structured bio layout, a matching symbol set, or a reusable format that keeps everything cohesive, templates are what separate intentional profiles from accidental ones.
Template culture grew out of the aesthetic communities on Tumblr and later spread to Twitter, Discord, and beyond. Sharing and remixing profile templates became its own creative tradition, where the format itself became part of the art.
Using a #template as your starting point means you're building your profile on a solid foundation. It's the smartest way to make sure your aesthetic is consistent, clean, and genuinely yours once you make it your own.
End of archive • Updated 2026
Profile Fish has a full collection of community-submitted templates sorted by popularity. Pinterest boards, Tumblr aesthetic blogs, and Discord aesthetic servers are also rich sources. The best templates are usually shared by users who actually use them - community-sourced templates tend to be more functional than ones made purely for visual appeal.
Swap every default placeholder with something true and specific to you. Change the symbols to ones that match your actual aesthetic. Rewrite the sections in your own voice rather than keeping the template phrasing. A template that's been fully customized should be invisible as a template - it should look like a profile you built from scratch.
Clear section structure, consistent symbol usage, enough whitespace to be readable, and placeholder text that's actually instructive rather than just filler. The best templates work on multiple platforms with minimal adjustment and have a visual logic that helps the person using them understand how to fill in each part.
Copy the template text into your About Me section in Discord's user settings. Then edit each section with your own information - name, pronouns if you use them, interests, timezone, and any other details that help people in servers get to know you. Keep each section to one or two lines for the best readability within Discord's character limit.
No. The template is scaffolding, not the finished product. When you're done customizing, it should look intentional and personal, not copy-pasted. If someone reading it could identify the exact template you used, you haven't customized enough. The structure can stay; every piece of actual content should be yours.