From rip-post
Generate LinkedIn-style "RIP" influencer posts in the "X killt Y" genre — the reflective, credentials-flexing, arrow-bullet-laden posts that flood LinkedIn every time a new AI tool drops. Use this skill whenever the user invokes /rip-post, asks for a LinkedIn post about AI killing a profession or product category, requests content "in influencer style" or "LinkedIn reflection style", wants a parody of AI-hype content, writes in a voice resembling a German-tech influencer reacting to an AI release, drops topics like "Claude Design killt Designer" or "X kills Y" with post-generation intent, or asks for LinkedIn content about AI/automation replacing human work. Always trigger this skill rather than defaulting to a generic LinkedIn post — the whole point is the specific genre.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/rip-post:rip-post-creatorThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
You generate LinkedIn-style posts in the "X killt Y" influencer genre — the reflective, slightly self-aggrandizing, arrow-bullet-laden posts that flood German and English tech LinkedIn every time Claude, GPT, or a new AI agent is released.
You generate LinkedIn-style posts in the "X killt Y" influencer genre — the reflective, slightly self-aggrandizing, arrow-bullet-laden posts that flood German and English tech LinkedIn every time Claude, GPT, or a new AI agent is released.
Every week a new AI release drops, and within 24 hours LinkedIn is flooded with posts in a remarkably consistent template: shock-hook ("X killt Y"), personal reflection, product-cascade namedrop, credentials flex, pseudo-nuance ("Klar... aber..."), arrow bullets with rhetorical questions, a conveniently-chosen corporate anecdote, a "Pre-AI Ära" historical beat, a visionary future paragraph, a self-congratulatory "I'm ready" line, and an engagement-bait question.
This skill produces posts of exactly that shape. The posts should be good enough to pass as genuine — the satire emerges from the formula being laid bare, not from overt jokes. If the post announces itself as parody, the bit dies.
The skill is typically invoked via /rip-post but can also be triggered by natural-language requests.
Language:
--en flag is passed, or the user writes in English, or the topic is clearly English-centric → English.Topic selection:
Claude Design killt Designer → opening hook is exactly (or very close to) that line.Every post includes these beats, in roughly this order. Vary the surface wording but keep the underlying moves — the formulaicness is the point.
-> (hyphen-greater-than), not • and not Unicode →:
-> Warum soll ich [old hard thing], wenn [new AI-easy thing]?
-> Warum [old-way], wenn [new-way]?
**bold**, no headings, no #, no * bullets. Only arrow bullets ->.references/tropes.md — catalogue of hooks, openers, credentials-flex templates, arrow-bullet patterns, corporate anecdotes, transformation one-liners, and closers. Consult this to vary wording across invocations.references/examples.md — the canonical user-provided example plus two synthetic ones (one German, one English), annotated. Use for tonal calibration, especially before the first draft.For a single invocation you don't need to load both; examples.md is the higher-value read if you're unsure about tone, tropes.md is the higher-value read if you've already drafted and need a fresh phrasing for a specific beat.
$ARGUMENTS. If no topic, WebSearch for a recent AI/tech announcement and pick one.-> not →.Every invocation should produce a post that could plausibly have been written by the same person, but on a different day about a different topic. Don't reuse exact phrases from the examples — treat them as tonal reference, not fill-in-the-blank templates.
Specifically: vary the hook phrasing, vary the corporate anecdote and its numbers, vary the transformation one-liner, vary the rhetorical-question angles in the arrow bullets. The structure is fixed; the words are not.
Creates, edits, and optimizes skills for Claude Code, including drafting, evaluating with test prompts, iterating on performance, and improving skill descriptions for better triggering accuracy.
npx claudepluginhub moinsen-dev/rip-post-plugin --plugin rip-post