Gacha Club 2
Gacha Club 2 looks like a single dress-up screen from the thumbnail, but it actually hands you three separate characters — Aiko, Chieko, and Isamu — each with their own wardrobe to build out, not one shared closet split three ways.
In Gacha Club 2, Aiko, Chieko, and Isamu Each Get Their Own Wardrobe
Gacha Club 2 doesn’t pool clothing across its three characters — Aiko’s dresses and skirts stay in Aiko’s wardrobe, and switching to Chieko or Isamu means starting that character’s build from their own separate option set. Nothing carries over automatically between them.
That separation matters because it means finishing “the game” really means finishing three smaller builds, not one. Players who only style Aiko and skip Chieko and Isamu are seeing a third of what Gacha Club 2 actually offers.
Isamu’s wardrobe leans more toward t-shirts and simpler silhouettes compared to Aiko and Chieko’s dress-and-skirt-heavy options, giving the three characters distinct default identities before a single outfit is even picked.
Dresses, Skirts, T-Shirts, and Shoes
The core wardrobe categories in Gacha Club 2 — dresses, skirts, t-shirts, and shoes — sound simple, but each character’s version of those categories is different enough that a “dress” on Aiko and a “dress” on Chieko rarely look interchangeable. Shoes are the one category that tends to get skipped fastest, since players gravitate toward finishing the upper-body look first.
Skirts and t-shirts can be mixed rather than treated as a locked dress-or-nothing choice, which opens up more casual, less formal looks than the dress options alone would allow.
Shoes matching the rest of an outfit is one of the small details that separates a rushed build from a finished one — a mismatched shoe choice is one of the more common things players go back and fix after finishing the rest of a look.
Why Building All Three Gacha Club 2 Characters Changes the Experience
Treating Gacha Club 2 as a three-character set rather than a single dress-up screen changes how players approach it. A cohesive theme across Aiko, Chieko, and Isamu — matching color palettes, or a shared formal-versus-casual split — reads very differently than three characters styled with no relationship to each other.
Some players deliberately style all three as a matching set; others treat each character independently and never compare them side by side. Both are valid, but the three-character structure is easy to miss if you only interact with Gacha Club 2 for a few minutes.
What Beginners Skip on Their First Visit
The most common shortcut is styling Aiko fully and treating Chieko and Isamu as an afterthought, clicking through their wardrobes quickly instead of giving each character the same attention. Since Gacha Club 2 splits its content evenly across all three, that shortcut means missing two-thirds of the available wardrobe options.
- Aiko — dress-and-skirt-forward wardrobe, the character most players build first.
- Chieko — a separate dress-and-skirt-forward set, distinct from Aiko’s despite the similar category range.
- Isamu — leans toward t-shirts and simpler silhouettes, the most casual of the three default identities.
Do Aiko, Chieko, and Isamu share any clothing options?
No — each character in Gacha Club 2 has a fully separate wardrobe, so an outfit built for Aiko can’t be applied directly to Chieko or Isamu.
Is there a way to save all three characters’ looks at once?
Each character’s finished look can be saved individually as you move through Gacha Club 2, rather than requiring all three to be finished in a single sitting before anything is kept.
Does outfit choice affect anything beyond appearance?
No — dresses, skirts, t-shirts, and shoes in Gacha Club 2 are all cosmetic, with no stats or unlockable content tied to any particular combination.
Gacha Club 2 rewards the players who treat Aiko, Chieko, and Isamu as three separate projects instead of one quick pass — a matching color palette across all three wardrobes reads as a deliberate set in a way that styling just one character never can, and that’s the part of Gacha Club 2 most first-time visitors never get around to seeing.




























