Game Design

art-bible

Donchitos/Claude-Code-Game-Studios · updated Apr 16, 2026

$npx skills add https://github.com/Donchitos/Claude-Code-Game-Studios --skill art-bible
summary

### Art Bible

  • description: "Guided, section-by-section Art Bible authoring. Creates the visual identity specification that gates all asset production. Run after /brainstorm is approved and before /map-systems or an
  • argument-hint: "[--review full|lean|solo]"
  • allowed-tools: Read, Glob, Grep, Write, Edit, Task, AskUserQuestion
skill.md

Phase 0: Parse Arguments and Context Check

Resolve the review mode (once, store for all gate spawns this run):

  1. If --review [full|lean|solo] was passed → use that
  2. Else read production/review-mode.txt → use that value
  3. Else → default to lean

See .claude/docs/director-gates.md for the full check pattern.

Read design/gdd/game-concept.md. If it does not exist, fail with:

"No game concept found. Run /brainstorm first — the art bible is authored after the game concept is approved."

Extract from game-concept.md:

  • Game title (working title)
  • Core fantasy and elevator pitch
  • Game pillars (all of them)
  • Visual Identity Anchor section if present (from brainstorm Phase 4 art-director output)
  • Target platform (if noted)

Retrofit mode detection: Glob design/art/art-bible.md. If the file exists:

  • Read it in full
  • For each of the 9 sections, check whether the body contains real content (more than a [To be designed] placeholder or similar) vs. is empty/placeholder
  • Build a section status table:
Section | Status
--------|--------
1. Visual Identity Statement | [Complete / Empty / Placeholder]
2. Color Palette | ...
3. Lighting & Atmosphere | ...
4. Character Art Direction | ...
5. Environment & Level Art | ...
6. UI Visual Language | ...
7. VFX & Particle Style | ...
8. Asset Standards | ...
9. Style Prohibitions | ...
  • Present this table to the user:

    "Found existing art bible at design/art/art-bible.md. [N] sections are complete, [M] need content. I'll work on the incomplete sections only — existing content will not be touched."

  • Only work on sections with Status: Empty or Placeholder. Do not re-author sections that are already complete.

If the file does not exist, this is a fresh authoring session — proceed normally.

Read .claude/docs/technical-preferences.md if it exists — extract performance budgets and engine for asset standard constraints.


Phase 1: Framing

Present the session context and ask two questions before authoring anything:

Use AskUserQuestion with two tabs:

  • Tab "Scope" — "Which sections need to be authored today?" Options: Full bible — all 9 sections / Visual identity core (sections 1–4 only) / Asset standards only (section 8) / Resume — fill in missing sections
  • Tab "References" — "Do you have reference games, films, or art that define the visual direction?" (Free text — let the user type specific titles. Do NOT preset options here.)

If the game-concept.md has a Visual Identity Anchor section, note it:

"Found a visual identity anchor from brainstorm: '[anchor name] — [one-line rule]'. I'll use this as the foundation for the art bible."


Phase 2: Visual Identity Foundation (Sections 1–4)

These four sections define the core visual language. All other sections flow from them. Author and write each to file before moving to the next.

Section 1: Visual Identity Statement

Goal: A one-line visual rule plus 2–3 supporting principles that resolve visual ambiguity.

If a visual anchor exists from game-concept.md: present it and ask:

  • "Build directly from this anchor?"
  • "Revise it before expanding?"
  • "Start fresh with new options?"

Agent delegation (MANDATORY): Spawn art-director via Task:

  • Provide: game concept (elevator pitch, core fantasy), full pillar set, platform target, any reference games/art from Phase 1 framing, the visual anchor if it exists
  • Ask: "Draft a Visual Identity Statement for this game. Provide: (1) a one-line visual rule that could resolve any visual decision ambiguity, (2) 2–3 supporting visual principles, each with a one-sentence design test ('when X is ambiguous, this principle says choose Y'). Anchor all principles directly in the stated pillars — each principle must serve a specific pillar."

Present the art-director's draft to the user. Use AskUserQuestion:

  • Options: [A] Lock this in / [B] Revise the one-liner / [C] Revise a supporting principle / [D] Describe my own direction

Write the approved section to file immediately.

Section 2: Mood & Atmosphere

Goal: Emotional targets by game state — specific enough for a lighting artist to work from.

For each major game state (e.g., exploration, combat, victory, defeat, menus — adapt to this game's states), define:

  • Primary emotion/mood target
  • Lighting character (time of day, color temperature, contrast level)
  • Atmospheric descriptors (3–5 adjectives)
  • Energy level (frenetic / measured / contemplative / etc.)

Agent delegation: Spawn art-director via Task with the Visual Identity Statement and pillar set. Ask: "Define mood and atmosphere targets for each major game state in this game. Be specific — 'dark and foreboding' is not enough. Name the exact emotional target, the lighting character (warm/cool, high/low contrast, time of day direction), and at least one visual element that carries the mood. Each game state must feel visually distinct from the others."

Write the approved section to file immediately.

Section 3: Shape Language

Goal: The geometric vocabulary that makes this game's world visually coherent and distinguishable.

Cover:

  • Character silhouette philosophy (how readable at thumbnail size? Distinguishing trait per archetype?)
  • Environment geometry (angular/curved/organic/geometric — which dominates and why?)
  • UI shape grammar (does UI echo the world aesthetic, or is it a distinct HUD language?)
  • Hero shapes vs. supporting shapes (what draws the eye, what recedes?)

Agent delegation: Spawn art-director via Task with Visual Identity Statement and mood targets. Ask: "Define the shape language for this game. Connect each shape principle back to the visual identity statement and a specific game pillar. Explain what these shape choices communicate to the player emotionally."

Write the approved section to file immediately.

Section 4: Color System

Goal: A complete, producible palette system that serves both aesthetic and communication needs.

Cover:

  • Primary palette (5–7 colors with roles — not just hex codes, but what each color means in this world)
  • Semantic color usage (what does red communicate? Gold? Blue? White? Establish the color vocabulary)
  • Per-biome or per-area color temperature rules (if the game has distinct areas)
  • UI palette (may differ from world palette — define the divergence explicitly)
  • Colorblind safety: which semantic colors need shape/icon/sound backup

Agent delegation: Spawn art-director via Task with Visual Identity Statement and mood targets. Ask: "Design the color system for this game. Every semantic color assignment must be explained — why does this color mean danger/safety/reward in this world? Identify which color pairs might fail colorblind players and specify what backup cues are needed."

Write the approved section to file immediately.


Phase 3: Production Guides (Sections 5–8)

These sections translate the visual identity into concrete production rules. They should be specific enough that an outsourcing team can follow them without additional briefing.

Section 5: Character Design Direction

Agent delegation: Spawn art-director via Task with sections 1–4. Ask: "Define character design direction for this game. Cover: visual archetype for the player character (if any), distinguishing feature rules per character type (how do players tell enemies/NPCs/allies apart at a glance?), expression/pose style targets (stiff/expressive/realistic/exaggerated), and LOD philosophy (how much detail is preserved at game camera distance?)."

Write the approved section to file.

Section 6: Environment Design Language

Agent delegation: Spawn art-director via Task with sections 1–4. Ask: "Define the environment design language for this game. Cover: architectural style and its relationship to the world's culture/history, texture philosophy (painted vs. PBR vs. stylized — why this choice for this game?), prop density rules (sparse/dense — what drives the choice per area type?), and environmental storytelling guidelines (what visual details should tell the story without text?)."

Write the approved section to file.

Section 7: UI/HUD Visual Direction

Agent delegation: Spawn in parallel:

  • art-director: Visual style for UI — diegetic vs. screen-space HUD, typography direction (font personality, weight, size hierarchy), iconography style (flat/outlined/illustrated/photorealistic), animation feel for UI elements
  • ux-designer: UX alignment check — does the visual direction support the interaction patterns this game requires? Flag any conflicts between art direction and readability/accessibility needs.

Collect both. If they conflict (e.g., art-director wants elaborate diegetic UI but ux-designer flags it would reduce combat readability), surface the conflict explicitly with both positions. Do NOT silently resolve — use AskUserQuestion to let the user decide.

Write the approved section to file.

Section 8: Asset Standards

Agent delegation: Spawn in parallel:

  • art-director: File format preferences, naming convention direction, texture resolution tiers, LOD level expectations, export settings philosophy
  • technical-artist: Engine-specific hard constraints — poly count budgets per asset category, texture memory limits, material slot counts, importer constraints, anything from the performance budgets in .claude/docs/technical-preferences.md

If any art preference conflicts with a technical constraint (e.g., art-director wants 4K textures but performance budget requires 2K for mobile), resolve the conflict explicitly — note both the ideal and the constrained standard, and explain the tradeoff. Ambiguity in asset standards is where production costs are born.

Write the approved section to file.


Phase 4: Reference Direction (Section 9)

Goal: A curated reference set that is specific about what to take and what to avoid from each source.

Agent delegation: Spawn art-director via Task with the completed sections 1–8. Ask: "Compile a reference direction for this game. Provide 3–5 reference sources (games, films, art styles, or specific artists). For each: name it, specify exactly what visual element to draw from it (not 'the general aesthetic' — a specific technique, color choice, or compositional rule), and specify what to explicitly avoid or diverge from (to prevent the 'trying to copy X' reading). References should be additive — no two references should be pointing in exactly the same direction."

Write the approved section to file.


Phase 5: Art Director Sign-Off

Review mode check — apply before spawning AD-ART-BIBLE:

  • solo → skip. Note: "AD-ART-BIBLE skipped — Solo mode." Proceed to Phase 6.
  • lean → skip (not a PHASE-GATE). Note: "AD-ART-BIBLE skipped — Lean mode." Proceed to Phase 6.
  • full → spawn as normal.

After all sections are complete (or the scoped set from Phase 1 is complete), spawn creative-director via Task using gate AD-ART-BIBLE (.claude/docs/director-gates.md).

Pass: art bible file path, game pillars, visual identity anchor.

Handle verdict per standard rules in director-gates.md. Record the verdict in the art bible's status header: > **Art Director Sign-Off (AD-ART-BIBLE)**: APPROVED [date] / CONCERNS (accepted) [date] / REVISED [date]


Phase 6: Close

Before presenting next steps, check project state:

  • Does design/gdd/systems-index.md exist? → map-systems is done, skip that option
  • Does .claude/docs/technical-preferences.md contain a configured engine (not [TO BE CONFIGURED])? → setup-engine is done, skip that option
  • Does design/gdd/ contain any *.md files? → design-system has been run, skip that option
  • Does design/gdd/gdd-cross-review-*.md exist? → review-all-gdds is done
  • Do GDDs exist (check above)? → include /consistency-check option

Use AskUserQuestion for next steps. Only include options that are genuinely next based on the state check above:

Option pool — include only if not already done:

  • [_] Run /map-systems — decompose the concept into systems before writing GDDs (skip if systems-index.md exists)
  • [_] Run /setup-engine — configure the engine (asset standards may need revisiting after engine is set) (skip if engine configured)
  • [_] Run /design-system — start the first GDD (skip if any GDDs exist)
  • [_] Run /review-all-gdds — cross-GDD consistency check (required before Technical Setup gate) (skip if gdd-cross-review-*.md exists)
  • [_] Run /asset-spec — generate per-asset visual specs and AI generation prompts from approved GDDs (include if GDDs exist)
  • [_] Run /consistency-check — scan existing GDDs against the art bible for visual direction conflicts (include if GDDs exist)
  • [_] Run /create-architecture — author the master architecture document (next Technical Setup step)
  • [_] Stop here

Assign letters A, B, C… only to the options actually included. Mark the most logical pipeline-advancing option as (recommended).

Always include /create-architecture and Stop here as options — these are always valid next steps once the art bible is complete.


Collaborative Protocol

Every section follows: Question → Options → Decision → Draft (from art-director agent) → Approval → Write to file

  • Never draft a section without first spawning the relevant agent(s)
  • Write each section to file immediately after approval — do not batch
  • Surface all agent disagreements to the user — never silently resolve conflicts between art-director and technical-artist
  • The art bible is a constraint document: it restricts future decisions in exchange for visual coherence. Every section should feel like it narrows the solution space productively.

Recommended Next Steps

After the art bible is approved:

  • Run /map-systems to decompose the concept into game systems before authoring GDDs
  • Run /setup-engine if the engine is not yet configured (asset standards may need revisiting after engine selection)
  • Run /design-system [first-system] to start authoring per-system GDDs
  • Run /consistency-check once GDDs exist to validate them against the art bible's visual rules
  • Run /create-architecture to produce the master architecture document
general reviews

Ratings

4.441 reviews
  • Arya Johnson· Dec 16, 2024

    We added art-bible from the explainx registry; install was straightforward and the SKILL.md answered most questions upfront.

  • Anaya Malhotra· Dec 16, 2024

    Registry listing for art-bible matched our evaluation — installs cleanly and behaves as described in the markdown.

  • Shikha Mishra· Dec 12, 2024

    Useful defaults in art-bible — fewer surprises than typical one-off scripts, and it plays nicely with `npx skills` flows.

  • Xiao Patel· Dec 4, 2024

    Keeps context tight: art-bible is the kind of skill you can hand to a new teammate without a long onboarding doc.

  • Advait Li· Nov 23, 2024

    art-bible has been reliable in day-to-day use. Documentation quality is above average for community skills.

  • Xiao Gill· Nov 7, 2024

    art-bible reduced setup friction for our internal harness; good balance of opinion and flexibility.

  • Lucas Tandon· Nov 7, 2024

    art-bible fits our agent workflows well — practical, well scoped, and easy to wire into existing repos.

  • Rahul Santra· Nov 3, 2024

    art-bible is among the better-maintained entries we tried; worth keeping pinned for repeat workflows.

  • Xiao Rao· Oct 26, 2024

    Registry listing for art-bible matched our evaluation — installs cleanly and behaves as described in the markdown.

  • Lucas Khanna· Oct 26, 2024

    We added art-bible from the explainx registry; install was straightforward and the SKILL.md answered most questions upfront.

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