The video actually convinced me that this might be an interesting tool. I'm going to try it myself for a small one-shot project and see how well it performs.
TUI-based reviews on it's own are already interesting. I had never considered it, I guess.
Great project! I’ve build something similar, not very clean and polished, but focussed around deterministic orchestration of multiple agents via typescript, because a coordinating agent was notoriously bad at things such as fetching relevant tickets and other context. One thing I struggle with so far, though, are the actual instructions for the review themselves. They are either too vague, leading to superficial or overly broad reviews, or too specific and thus not applicable to different kinds of PRs…
the irony of multi-agent code review is that the people who would use it are already the ones who care about code quality. the real problem is everyone else just hitting accept on whatever claude spits out without even reading the diff. tooling for review keeps getting better while the average review effort keeps going down.
Is there a good way of adding in your own rules to the review? I’m always in the market for better review tools but I also need to check against internal coding stands and expectations,
esafak | 6 hours ago
stingraycharles | 4 hours ago
Seems like it would create a lot of friction and burn a lot of tokens.
bilekas | 3 hours ago
Have we all just given up?
stingraycharles | an hour ago
ramon156 | an hour ago
docheinestages | 3 hours ago
yuppiepuppie | 3 hours ago
It runs locally, YOU review all the code locally, and feedback that to Claude.
Agents reviewing AI code always felt dirty to me, especially when working on production (non-disposable) code.
ramon156 | an hour ago
TUI-based reviews on it's own are already interesting. I had never considered it, I guess.
thesimon | 3 hours ago
How expensive is it to run in your experience? In $ or tokens?
nkmnz | 2 hours ago
Ozzie-D | 54 minutes ago
moomin | 36 minutes ago