what happens when you prompt Fable to use up an entire week's worth of Claude Max 20x credits at once?
as it turns out, you end up with >50 playable games! 🤯
I realized that I had a Claude account which I hadn't used all week and its reset was the next day, so I wrote a one-shot prompt to parallelize dozens of Fable-5 agents and encouraged them to spend my entire weekly usage as fast as possible 🙃
the results were really impressive! everything was nice to look at, fun to play, and worked perfectly. many of the games bring a heavy dose of nostalgia for the Flash Games era
hard to imagine this being possible 6-12 months ago, especially from a single prompt!
PROMPT:
"ok i have a challenge for you! i need to use up my anthropic credits for the week in one day, and ONLY on fable 5!! lets see if we can't build something that leverages our claude code cli to build a bunch of epic demos for fable 5 of all sorts of different complex cool creative projects! leverage fable 5's full creativity and intelligence until our credits are gone!! tons of stuff in parallel!"
At small enough airports, they don’t make you agree to terms and conditions to use the WiFi, so you can watch porn at the gate on full volume and nobody can stop you.
We are pleased to announce the launch of Rubicon, a new quarterly of books and ideas.
Every journal makes a wager about what its readers can bear: how much difficulty, how much dissent, and how much of the past. Our wager is that they can bear quite a lot. Elsewhere, opinion arrives without argumentation and the facts of history arrive flattened into whatever narrative is needed by present expediencies. We are betting on the alternative: that a reader will follow an essay of six thousand words if the thinking is honest, and that ideas outside the current consensus deserve the same attention as those inside it.
Rubicon exists because the essay-review—long-form, argued, unhurried—has become an endangered form of thought. Our inaugural issue attempts to reinvigorate that tradition by bringing together eight essay-reviews spanning left-wing political violence, Cold War diplomacy, civil rights law, fin-de-siècle Vienna, Hollywood’s rise and fall, the ideological ferment of interwar Italy and France, and generative anthropology.
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