3243dwon
UserA Claude skill that adapts content across any language, culture, and platform so it reads native, not translated. Ships a validator.
Categories
Indexed Skills (3)
vibe-translator
Adapt content across languages, cultures, and platforms so it reads as if a native wrote it from scratch — not a word-for-word translation, but a rebuild that respects tone, conventions, formatting, humor, and the unspoken rules of the target context. Works for ANY language and ANY platform, in any direction (LinkedIn, Xiaohongshu/小红书, Weibo, Twitter/X, Instagram, TikTok, Reddit, formal/business registers, marketing copy, emails, and more). Use whenever someone wants to move content across cultures, languages, or platforms. Trigger on phrases like "make this work for [platform]", "post this on [X]", "rewrite this for a [language/culture] audience", "localize this", "translate this", "make this sound natural in [language]", "adapt this for [market]", or any request where a direct translation would feel off, stiff, or foreign. Use even when the user only says "translate" but the destination has different cultural conventions than the source.
pre-mortem
Find what will kill a plan before it's committed to — by assuming it already failed and working backwards to the causes. Based on Gary Klein's pre-mortem technique. Unlike generic "what are the risks?" brainstorming, this skill imagines a specific, vivid failure six months out, reasons back to the most likely causes, ranks them by likelihood × impact, and prescribes the single highest-leverage fix. Use it on project plans, launches, strategies, architectures, migrations, investments, and big decisions. Trigger on phrases like "poke holes in this", "what could go wrong?", "stress-test my plan", "pre-mortem", "red-team this", "why might this fail?", or any request to surface the failure modes of a plan before acting on it.
second-order
Reason past the obvious, first-order consequence to the second-, third-, and long-tail effects everyone else stops short of. Where most analysis says "X causes Y", this skill asks "and then what?" — mapping the cascade, surfacing the non-obvious winners and losers, the reflexive responses, and the effects that only show up over time. Use it on policy changes, product/pricing decisions, market events, technology shifts, regulations, and strategy calls. Trigger on phrases like "what are the knock-on effects?", "play this forward", "what happens next?", "who actually benefits?", "second-order effects", "what's the unintended consequence?", or any request to think through the downstream ripple of a decision or event rather than just its immediate result.
Bio shown is the top-scored skill's repo description as a fallback — real GitHub bios land in a future update.