I use Claude Code Sonnet and Opus for this and it works pretty well. Not perfect but good enough. At some point, I will have but to go in and tweak layout but like 99% of the functionality and layout is done for me.
I had claude build a backdoor command port in the Godot application I'm working on. Using commands, Claude can interact with the screen, dump the node tree, and take screen shots. It works pretty well. Claude will definitely iterate over layout issues.
Have you written this up anywhere? I have dropped my projects due to work/family commitments but see this as potentially removing some of the friction involved.
I interviewed at a company that used a simple project to screen candidates. It was implementing a cash register checkout system. The task was soo simple that I couldn't figure out what they were looking for. So I implemented the simplest thing possible. I got the job partially because they were impressed by my utterly simple solution. I helped evaluate other candidates given the exact same problem and it's amazing how some people dialed up the complexity to 11. None of them passed the screening.
Yes, it's about speed/efficiency and instant answers. A couple of years ago one would usually have to skim multiple articles to find the desired information. Now, the answer is often immediately available without further searching.
This is a wild sequence of events. This will happen again and it will get worse as the number of OpenClaw installations increase. OpenClaw enthusiasts are already enamored with their pets and I bet many of them are both horrified and excited about this behavior. It's like when your dog gets into a fight and kills a raccoon.
Can you provide more guidance on to use it? What makes a good first prompt? What if I don't like any of the recommended choices? Seems like I should be able to add my own.
There's a demo on the landing page that walks through it. Basically you input any idea—no matter how vague—and the system generates branching directions you could take it. You explore the branches, and when you're satisfied you can export and the system generates a technical screenplay based on your choices.
There's no "right" first prompt—I've thrown some of my dumbest ideas at it just to see where the system takes me. That's kind of the point.
Regarding adding your own branches—yes, that's on my roadmap. Letting users create their own options and shape the graph more directly. Still a work in progress!
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