This indie dev is making a Beyblade-inspired roguelite where you build & battle spinning tops across a vibrant Y2K city
- Collect 60+ parts & find insane combos
- Bet your lunch money on your blade
- Save the city from a rich loser
It's called Slayblade. Would you play this?
Almost everyone is building agent harness systems the wrong way.
The default move: pick LangChain or LangGraph or the OpenAI Agents SDK, accept the loop, the tools, the memory, the orchestration, the policy engine, the credential store, the budget tracker, all of it, as one decision.
Mike, wrote a long piece today on why this shape is wrong, and why every long-running agent team eventually ends up rewriting its harness from scratch.
His argument: a harness isn't one thing. It's fifteen separate concerns bundled together because the surrounding ecosystem didn't give you a way to compose them. Turn state machines, provider routing, credential vaults, policy engines, approval gates, budget trackers, hook fanout, context compaction, session trees, OpenTelemetry tracing. Frameworks ship them as one block because that was the only shape available a year ago.
It isn't anymore.
When every layer is a worker on a shared bus with a typed function contract, "build your own harness" stops meaning "fork a framework." It means swap a worker. Don't like the model catalogue? Write one that hits a live API. Don't like file-backed credentials? Plug in your secrets manager. Want approvals routed through Slack instead of a console? Add a worker that calls approval::resolve. The rest of the stack does not change.
The framework era picked a position for you and locked you in. The worker model leaves the choice in your hand.
Worth reading in full.
Excited to share our most powerful new Claude Code feature: dynamic workflows!
Mention "workflow" in a prompt and Claude will dynamically create an orchestration plan that it strictly follows, allowing you to confidently trust that every stage happens in the right order even across 100s of agents.
🥺🏆 Mikel Arteta: “It’s one of the best feelings I’ve ever had. I couldn’t watch City game. I could hear noises from inside, then my son opened the door, ran towards me…
…he was crying and he said ‘we are champions daddy!”.
@BeanymanSports 🎥
I saw Bayern 10-2 twice
I saw us bottle the league to Leicester
I saw the Monaco 2nd leg
I saw Baku
I saw the Atletico UEL semifinal
I saw us concede 33 shots to Watford
I saw Newcastle 21/22
I saw 8-2
I saw it all
You really can’t understand what this Premier League title means to an Arsenal fan unless you’ve lived through the last two decades with them.
This is a fanbase that watched their club go from Invincibles to years of banter, financial restrictions, stadium debt, constant ridicule, losing big players, finishing outside the top four, and becoming the punchline of football conversations online. An entire generation of Arsenal fans grew up hearing stories about league titles instead of actually experiencing one themselves. Went from being utter joke, losing 8-2, 6-0 to Chelsea. Mourinho called their coach a Specialist in Failure.
Some Arsenal fans were children the last time this club won the league. Some are adults now with jobs, families and responsibilities, and this is their first real moment of seeing Arsenal crowned champions. That emotional gap matters. This is not just “another title” to them, it feels like closure after years of patience.
And the journey makes it even more emotional. This wasn’t bought instantly. Mikel Arteta inherited a broken squad, a disconnected atmosphere and a club many people thought had lost its elite standards permanently. Arsenal finished 8th twice. People laughed at the project, laughed at the process, laughed at the signings, laughed at the young players. Every setback became viral content.
But the club stayed committed. The fans stayed committed too.
They watched young players like Bukayo Saka, William Saliba, Martin Ødegaard and others grow from prospects into leaders. They endured title races that ended in heartbreak. They watched rivals celebrate while being told Arsenal were “soft” or “not serious”.
So when this title finally arrives, it’s not just celebration, it’s release. Years of frustration leaving at once.
That’s why the emotions look different. Arsenal fans are not celebrating like a club that wins the league every other season. They’re celebrating like people who waited years to feel respected again. Like supporters who defended their club through every difficult era and are finally seeing belief rewarded.
And honestly, that’s what makes football beautiful sometimes. The long waits make the moments hit harder.
6am in London, less than 8 hours after winning the league… and the Arsenal boys are just casually walking around the streets like regular lads.
No entourage, no superstar behaviour — just vibes, laughter and football.
Bukayo Saka especially looking like the most normal guy you’d ever meet despite earning thousands every week.
That’s what people forget sometimes: beneath the fame and money, most of these boys are just humble kids who genuinely love playing football.
Congrats to all Arsenal fans around the globe.
#COYG
For everyone who suffered through 8-2.
For everyone who half 6 at Stamford Bridge in Wenger’s 1,000th game.
For everyone who suffered through Baku.
For everyone who had to go to school after conceding 10 to Bayern.
Today is for you. Drink it all in. We deserve this.