Genetic-modification free prompts and swap face images

313 text to image prompts for genetic-modification are available. Compatible with MidJourney, Dall-E and Stable Diffusion

Best prompts for genetic-modification

A photorealistic depiction of a DNA double helix replicating, with glowing strands and focused lighting, set in a cellular nucleus with chromatin structures, hyper-detailed, dynamic, and medical-themed
a futuristic and intricate image of a fair-skinned genomics expert with long, wavy dark brown hair, working in a high-tech laboratory filled with advanced equipment and glowing biological samples. Dressed in a white lab coat with subtle futuristic designs, she meticulously adjusts the genetic code of a bioluminescent plankton. Her bioluminescent tattoo glows in emerald green, harmonizing with her work, capturing the balance between science and nature, digital illustration, ultra-detailed, soft lighting
In a decrepit, overgrown metropolis, a rogue geneticist hides among the ruins, their body a fusion of synthetic and organic mutations. Their symbiotic mycelial neural lattice woven with glass-reinforced bone implants shifts in response to danger, a testament to the unchecked experimentation of corporate bioweapon research. Fungal growths sprawl over abandoned biotech facilities, their spores whispering fragmented data to those who can decipher them. Towering over the ruins, bio-mechanical monoliths stand as remnants of failed utopias, their vascular piping still pumping a strange, viscous fluid. Patrolling the skies, swarms of gene-spliced drones scan for rogue mutations. The atmosphere is eerie, a mix of decay and unholy evolution, where nature and technology have become indistinguishable.
The distorted, semi-liquid race with appendages resembling spikes, moving on a thick foot, omnivorous, capable of DNA splicing to adopt traits, masters of biotechnology, governed by meritocracy, in decline from a medium-gravity, resource-poor world with a single moon.
From the dawn of creation, the vibrant, agile sperm cell, by H.R. Giger