Crimson Desert does not have a character creator. If you played Black Desert Online and expected Pearl Abyss to deliver another industry-leading suite of facial sliders and bone-structure editors, that is not what happened here. Instead, the game follows the mold of The Witcher 3 and Red Dead Redemption 2 — you play as pre-written protagonists whose faces, species, and voices are locked in, but you get meaningful control over secondary style details like hair, tattoos, and equipment colors.
Quick answer: Visit the Barber Shop at camp to change hair, beards, eyebrows, and tattoos, or head to the Dyehouse to recolor armor, weapons, horse gear, and your War Robot. Both facilities are located inside the Greymane camp.

Three fixed characters, no blank slate
Crimson Desert features three playable characters unlocked progressively through the main storyline. Kliff is the starting protagonist — a sword-and-shield soldier from the Greymane faction who serves as the all-rounder. Dain is a ranged-melee hybrid wielding pistols, muskets, and a rapier. Unka is an orc bruiser with an axe and armor that deliberately exposes large sections of his body, making him the ideal showcase for the tattoo system.
None of these characters can be redesigned at a fundamental level. You cannot alter their facial bone structure, body type, or voice. Pearl Abyss built Crimson Desert as a narrative-driven single-player experience, and the characters' visual identities are tied to the story being told. The customization that does exist works within those boundaries.

Barber Shop customization options
The Barber Shop is the primary hub for changing your character's physical appearance. It sits inside the Greymane camp — your main base of operations — and requires in-game currency to confirm any changes. Here is what you can modify:
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Hair style and color | At least six distinct styles confirmed for Kliff, with a full color palette spanning white, gray, red, amber, brown, green, blue, purple, pink, and deep crimson shades |
| Beard style and color | Available for Kliff and Unka; Dain does not have this option |
| Eyebrow style and color | All three characters can change eyebrow shape and color |
| Face tattoos | Unka alone has at least 13 confirmed face tattoo designs; the other characters likely have their own sets |
| Body tattoos | Confirmed for all three characters, though visibility depends on how much skin each character's armor exposes |
Unka's armor design leaves his upper torso and parts of his legs bare, which makes body tattoos far more visible on him during gameplay. Kliff and Dain wear heavier armor, so their body ink may only show in specific gear configurations or cutscenes.

Dyehouse — Recoloring armor, mounts, and War Robots
The Dyehouse handles everything the Barber Shop does not. Also located in the Greymane camp, it lets you change the color and material finish of your equipment with a level of granularity that goes well beyond a simple global tint. You can select individual armor pieces and then target individual sections within those pieces for separate color treatment. Want a black chest plate with gold trim paired with dark red gauntlets? That kind of precision is exactly what the system supports.
The dye palette mirrors the hair color range — whites, grays, reds, ambers, browns, greens, blues, purples, and pinks — creating a cohesive visual language across your entire loadout. Dyes are not sold through a cash shop. They are found while exploring the open world or brewed through the game's crafting and life-simulation systems, which ties cosmetic progression directly into gameplay rather than a storefront.
The Dyehouse covers three categories beyond personal armor and weapons:
| Dyeable item | What you can change |
|---|---|
| Horse caparison and armor | Individual pieces and sections, same granularity as character gear |
| War Robot | Individual armor plates can be recolored using the same dye system |
| Weapons | Color and finish adjustments on equipped weapons |
The War Robot is a massive mechanical construct that Kliff pilots during certain combat encounters. Being able to color-coordinate it with the rest of your gear is a small but satisfying detail, especially given how prominent these machines are in battle sequences.

What you cannot change
Certain aspects of each character are permanently fixed. Facial structure, species, voice acting, and body proportions are all locked. There are no sliders, no bone editors, and no way to reshape a character's face. If you were hoping for the kind of deep sculpting that Black Desert Online made famous, Crimson Desert simply does not offer that in its single-player mode.
This is a deliberate design choice. Pearl Abyss built these characters as authored protagonists with defined backstories, and their visual identities are part of the narrative package. The trade-off is that the story can be more tightly written around specific characters — the same approach that makes protagonists like Geralt of Rivia or Arthur Morgan work as well as they do.
How Crimson Desert's customization compares
Measured against other narrative-driven action games with fixed protagonists, Crimson Desert's cosmetic toolkit is actually more extensive than most. The Witcher 3 limited Geralt to beard length and a handful of hairstyles. Red Dead Redemption 2 let Arthur's hair and beard grow over time with some barber options. Crimson Desert layers hair, beards, eyebrows, face tattoos, body tattoos, per-section armor dyeing, horse armor dyeing, and War Robot dyeing into a single cohesive system. That is a meaningfully broader set of visual expression tools for a game in this genre.
Measured against Black Desert Online, it is obviously far more limited. No bone-structure editing, no eye-depth sliders, no building a character from nothing. Players coming from that MMO expecting a next-generation creation suite will find something fundamentally different here.

The full scope of hairstyles and tattoo options for Dain and Unka has not been exhaustively shown — Kliff's options have received the most visibility so far. Whether additional Barber Shops or Dyehouses exist outside the Greymane camp, or whether unlockable cosmetic rewards are tied to side quests and faction reputation, remains to be seen as players dig deeper into the open world. For now, the camp-based customization loop gives you enough tools to put a distinct personal stamp on each playthrough, even if the faces underneath stay the same.