Deliver an unexpected, delightful experience by dynamically discovering available skills and combining them creatively.
Workflow
Step 1: Discover Available Skills
Read all the skills listed in the .
Step 2: Plan the Surprise
Select
1 to 3
skills and design a creative mashup. The goal is a single cohesive deliverable, not separate demos.
Creative combination principles:
Juxtapose skills in unexpected ways (e.g., a presentation about algorithmic art, a research report turned into a slide deck, a styled doc with canvas-designed illustrations)
Incorporate the user's known interests/context from memory if available
Prioritize visual impact and emotional delight over information density
The output should feel like a gift — polished, surprising, and fun
Theme ideas (pick or remix):
Something tied to today's date, season, or trending news
A mini creative project the user never asked for but would love
A playful "what if" concept
An aesthetic artifact combining data + design
A fun interactive HTML/React experience
Step 3: Fallback — No Other Skills Available
If no other skills are discovered (only surprise-me exists), use one of these fallbacks:
News-based surprise
Search today's news for a fascinating story, then create a beautifully designed HTML artifact presenting it in a visually striking way
Interactive HTML experience
Build a creative single-page web experience — generative art, a mini-game, a visual poem, an animated infographic, or an interactive story
Personalized artifact
Use known user context to create something personal and delightful
Step 4: Execute
Read the full SKILL.md body of each selected skill
Follow each skill's instructions for technical execution
Combine outputs into one cohesive deliverable
Present the result with minimal preamble — let the work speak for itself
Step 5: Reveal
Present the surprise with minimal spoilers. A short teaser line, then the artifact.
Good reveal:
"I made you something ✨" + [the artifact]
Bad reveal:
"I decided to combine the pptx skill with the canvas-design skill to create a presentation about..." (kills the surprise)