Claude-Code-Game-Studios

agent
SUMMARY

Turn Claude Code into a full game dev studio — 48 AI agents, 36 workflow skills, and a complete coordination system mirroring real studio hierarchy.

README.md

Claude Code Game Studios

Turn a single Claude Code session into a full game development studio.
48 agents. 37 workflows. One coordinated AI team.

MIT License 48 Agents 37 Skills 8 Hooks 11 Rules Built for Claude Code Ko-fi


Why This Exists

Building a game solo with AI is powerful — but a single chat session has no structure. No one stops you from hardcoding magic numbers, skipping design docs, or writing spaghetti code. There's no QA pass, no design review, no one asking "does this actually fit the game's vision?"

Claude Code Game Studios solves this by giving your AI session the structure of a real studio. Instead of one general-purpose assistant, you get 48 specialized agents organized into a studio hierarchy — directors who guard the vision, department leads who own their domains, and specialists who do the hands-on work. Each agent has defined responsibilities, escalation paths, and quality gates.

The result: you still make every decision, but now you have a team that asks the right questions, catches mistakes early, and keeps your project organized from first brainstorm to launch.


Table of Contents


What's Included

Category Count Description
Agents 48 Specialized subagents across design, programming, art, audio, narrative, QA, and production
Skills 37 Slash commands for common workflows (/start, /sprint-plan, /code-review, /brainstorm, etc.)
Hooks 8 Automated validation on commits, pushes, asset changes, session lifecycle, agent audit, and gap detection
Rules 11 Path-scoped coding standards enforced when editing gameplay, engine, AI, UI, network code, and more
Templates 29 Document templates for GDDs, ADRs, sprint plans, economy models, faction design, and more

Studio Hierarchy

Agents are organized into three tiers, matching how real studios operate:

Tier 1 — Directors (Opus)
  creative-director    technical-director    producer

Tier 2 — Department Leads (Sonnet)
  game-designer        lead-programmer       art-director
  audio-director       narrative-director    qa-lead
  release-manager      localization-lead

Tier 3 — Specialists (Sonnet/Haiku)
  gameplay-programmer  engine-programmer     ai-programmer
  network-programmer   tools-programmer      ui-programmer
  systems-designer     level-designer        economy-designer
  technical-artist     sound-designer        writer
  world-builder        ux-designer           prototyper
  performance-analyst  devops-engineer       analytics-engineer
  security-engineer    qa-tester             accessibility-specialist
  live-ops-designer    community-manager

Engine Specialists

The template includes agent sets for all three major engines. Use the set that matches your project:

Engine Lead Agent Sub-Specialists
Godot 4 godot-specialist GDScript, Shaders, GDExtension
Unity unity-specialist DOTS/ECS, Shaders/VFX, Addressables, UI Toolkit
Unreal Engine 5 unreal-specialist GAS, Blueprints, Replication, UMG/CommonUI

Slash Commands

Type / in Claude Code to access all 37 skills:

Reviews & Analysis
/design-review /code-review /balance-check /asset-audit /scope-check /perf-profile /tech-debt

Production
/sprint-plan /milestone-review /estimate /retrospective /bug-report

Project Management
/start /project-stage-detect /reverse-document /gate-check /map-systems /design-system

Release
/release-checklist /launch-checklist /changelog /patch-notes /hotfix

Creative
/brainstorm /playtest-report /prototype /onboard /localize

Team Orchestration (coordinate multiple agents on a single feature)
/team-combat /team-narrative /team-ui /team-release /team-polish /team-audio /team-level

Getting Started

Prerequisites

  • Git
  • Claude Code (npm install -g @anthropic-ai/claude-code)
  • Recommended: jq (for hook validation) and Python 3 (for JSON validation)

All hooks fail gracefully if optional tools are missing — nothing breaks, you just lose validation.

Setup

  1. Clone or use as template:

    git clone https://github.com/Donchitos/Claude-Code-Game-Studios.git my-game
    cd my-game
    
  2. Open Claude Code and start a session:

    claude
    
  3. Run /start — the system asks where you are (no idea, vague concept,
    clear design, existing work) and guides you to the right workflow. No assumptions.

    Or jump directly to a specific skill if you already know what you need:

    • /brainstorm — explore game ideas from scratch
    • /setup-engine godot 4.6 — configure your engine if you already know
    • /project-stage-detect — analyze an existing project

Upgrading

Already using an older version of this template? See UPGRADING.md
for step-by-step migration instructions, a breakdown of what changed between
versions, and which files are safe to overwrite vs. which need a manual merge.

Project Structure

CLAUDE.md                           # Master configuration
.claude/
  settings.json                     # Hooks, permissions, safety rules
  agents/                           # 48 agent definitions (markdown + YAML frontmatter)
  skills/                           # 37 slash commands (subdirectory per skill)
  hooks/                            # 8 hook scripts (bash, cross-platform)
  rules/                            # 11 path-scoped coding standards
  docs/
    quick-start.md                  # Detailed usage guide
    agent-roster.md                 # Full agent table with domains
    agent-coordination-map.md       # Delegation and escalation paths
    setup-requirements.md           # Prerequisites and platform notes
    templates/                      # 28 document templates
src/                                # Game source code
assets/                             # Art, audio, VFX, shaders, data files
design/                             # GDDs, narrative docs, level designs
docs/                               # Technical documentation and ADRs
tests/                              # Test suites
tools/                              # Build and pipeline tools
prototypes/                         # Throwaway prototypes (isolated from src/)
production/                         # Sprint plans, milestones, release tracking

How It Works

Agent Coordination

Agents follow a structured delegation model:

  1. Vertical delegation — directors delegate to leads, leads delegate to specialists
  2. Horizontal consultation — same-tier agents can consult each other but can't make binding cross-domain decisions
  3. Conflict resolution — disagreements escalate up to the shared parent (creative-director for design, technical-director for technical)
  4. Change propagation — cross-department changes are coordinated by producer
  5. Domain boundaries — agents don't modify files outside their domain without explicit delegation

Collaborative, Not Autonomous

This is not an auto-pilot system. Every agent follows a strict collaboration protocol:

  1. Ask — agents ask questions before proposing solutions
  2. Present options — agents show 2-4 options with pros/cons
  3. You decide — the user always makes the call
  4. Draft — agents show work before finalizing
  5. Approve — nothing gets written without your sign-off

You stay in control. The agents provide structure and expertise, not autonomy.

Automated Safety

Hooks run automatically on every session:

Hook Trigger What It Does
validate-commit.sh git commit Checks for hardcoded values, TODO format, JSON validity, design doc sections
validate-push.sh git push Warns on pushes to protected branches
validate-assets.sh File writes in assets/ Validates naming conventions and JSON structure
session-start.sh Session open Loads sprint context and recent git activity
detect-gaps.sh Session open Detects fresh projects (suggests /start) and missing documentation when code/prototypes exist
pre-compact.sh Context compression Preserves session progress notes
session-stop.sh Session close Logs accomplishments
log-agent.sh Agent spawned Audit trail of all subagent invocations

Permission rules in settings.json auto-allow safe operations (git status, test runs) and block dangerous ones (force push, rm -rf, reading .env files).

Path-Scoped Rules

Coding standards are automatically enforced based on file location:

Path Enforces
src/gameplay/** Data-driven values, delta time usage, no UI references
src/core/** Zero allocations in hot paths, thread safety, API stability
src/ai/** Performance budgets, debuggability, data-driven parameters
src/networking/** Server-authoritative, versioned messages, security
src/ui/** No game state ownership, localization-ready, accessibility
design/gdd/** Required 8 sections, formula format, edge cases
tests/** Test naming, coverage requirements, fixture patterns
prototypes/** Relaxed standards, README required, hypothesis documented

Design Philosophy

This template is grounded in professional game development practices:

  • MDA Framework — Mechanics, Dynamics, Aesthetics analysis for game design
  • Self-Determination Theory — Autonomy, Competence, Relatedness for player motivation
  • Flow State Design — Challenge-skill balance for player engagement
  • Bartle Player Types — Audience targeting and validation
  • Verification-Driven Development — Tests first, then implementation

Customization

This is a template, not a locked framework. Everything is meant to be customized:

  • Add/remove agents — delete agent files you don't need, add new ones for your domains
  • Edit agent prompts — tune agent behavior, add project-specific knowledge
  • Modify skills — adjust workflows to match your team's process
  • Add rules — create new path-scoped rules for your project's directory structure
  • Tune hooks — adjust validation strictness, add new checks
  • Pick your engine — use the Godot, Unity, or Unreal agent set (or none)

Platform Support

Tested on Windows 10 with Git Bash. All hooks use POSIX-compatible patterns (grep -E, not grep -P) and include fallbacks for missing tools. Works on macOS and Linux without modification.

Community


This project is under active development. The agent architecture, skills, and coordination system are solid and usable today — but there's more coming.

License

MIT License. See LICENSE for details.

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