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tbeard602

Develop Web Game

by Tbeard602 · GitHub ↗ · v1.0.0 · MIT-0
cross-platform ⚠ suspicious
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Install in OpenClaw
/install develop-web-game
Description
Use when Codex is building or iterating on a web game (HTML/JS) and needs a reliable development + testing loop: implement small changes, run a Playwright-ba...
README (SKILL.md)

Develop Web Game

Build games in small steps and validate every change. Treat each iteration as: implement → act → pause → observe → adjust.

Skill paths (set once)

export CODEX_HOME="${CODEX_HOME:-$HOME/.codex}"
export WEB_GAME_CLIENT="$CODEX_HOME/skills/develop-web-game/scripts/web_game_playwright_client.js"
export WEB_GAME_ACTIONS="$CODEX_HOME/skills/develop-web-game/references/action_payloads.json"

User-scoped skills install under $CODEX_HOME/skills (default: ~/.codex/skills).

Workflow

  1. Pick a goal. Define a single feature or behavior to implement.
  2. Implement small. Make the smallest change that moves the game forward.
  3. Ensure integration points. Provide a single canvas and window.render_game_to_text so the test loop can read state.
  4. Add window.advanceTime(ms). Strongly prefer a deterministic step hook so the Playwright script can advance frames reliably; without it, automated tests can be flaky.
  5. Initialize progress.md. If progress.md exists, read it first and confirm the original user prompt is recorded at the top (prefix with Original prompt:). Also note any TODOs and suggestions left by the previous agent. If missing, create it and write Original prompt: \x3Cprompt> at the top before appending updates.
  6. Verify Playwright availability. Ensure playwright is available (local dependency or global install). If unsure, check npx first.
  7. Run the Playwright test script. You must run $WEB_GAME_CLIENT after each meaningful change; do not invent a new client unless required.
  8. Use the payload reference. Base actions on $WEB_GAME_ACTIONS to avoid guessing keys.
  9. Inspect state. Capture screenshots and text state after each burst.
  10. Inspect screenshots. Open the latest screenshot, verify expected visuals, fix any issues, and rerun the script. Repeat until correct.
  11. Verify controls and state (multi-step focus). Exhaustively exercise all important interactions. For each, think through the full multi-step sequence it implies (cause → intermediate states → outcome) and verify the entire chain works end-to-end. Confirm render_game_to_text reflects the same state shown on screen. If anything is off, fix and rerun. Examples of important interactions: move, jump, shoot/attack, interact/use, select/confirm/cancel in menus, pause/resume, restart, and any special abilities or puzzle actions defined by the request. Multi-step examples: shooting an enemy should reduce its health; when health reaches 0 it should disappear and update the score; collecting a key should unlock a door and allow level progression.
  12. Check errors. Review console errors and fix the first new issue before continuing.
  13. Reset between scenarios. Avoid cross-test state when validating distinct features.
  14. Iterate with small deltas. Change one variable at a time (frames, inputs, timing, positions), then repeat steps 7–13 until stable.

Example command (actions required):

node "$WEB_GAME_CLIENT" --url http://localhost:5173 --actions-file "$WEB_GAME_ACTIONS" --click-selector "#start-btn" --iterations 3 --pause-ms 250

Example actions (inline JSON):

{
  "steps": [
    { "buttons": ["left_mouse_button"], "frames": 2, "mouse_x": 120, "mouse_y": 80 },
    { "buttons": [], "frames": 6 },
    { "buttons": ["right"], "frames": 8 },
    { "buttons": ["space"], "frames": 4 }
  ]
}

Test Checklist

Test any new features added for the request and any areas your logic changes could affect. Identify issues, fix them, and re-run the tests to confirm they’re resolved.

Examples of things to test:

  • Primary movement/interaction inputs (e.g., move, jump, shoot, confirm/select).
  • Win/lose or success/fail transitions.
  • Score/health/resource changes.
  • Boundary conditions (collisions, walls, screen edges).
  • Menu/pause/start flow if present.
  • Any special actions tied to the request (powerups, combos, abilities, puzzles, timers).

Test Artifacts to Review

  • Latest screenshots from the Playwright run.
  • Latest render_game_to_text JSON output.
  • Console error logs (fix the first new error before continuing). You must actually open and visually inspect the latest screenshots after running the Playwright script, not just generate them. Ensure everything that should be visible on screen is actually visible. Go beyond the start screen and capture gameplay screenshots that cover all newly added features. Treat the screenshots as the source of truth; if something is missing, it is missing in the build. If you suspect a headless/WebGL capture issue, rerun the Playwright script in headed mode and re-check. Fix and rerun in a tight loop until the screenshots and text state look correct. Once fixes are verified, re-test all important interactions and controls, confirm they work, and ensure your changes did not introduce regressions. If they did, fix them and rerun everything in a loop until interactions, text state, and controls all work as expected. Be exhaustive in testing controls; broken games are not acceptable.

Core Game Guidelines

Canvas + Layout

  • Prefer a single canvas centered in the window.

Visuals

  • Keep on-screen text minimal; show controls on a start/menu screen rather than overlaying them during play.
  • Avoid overly dark scenes unless the design calls for it. Make key elements easy to see.
  • Draw the background on the canvas itself instead of relying on CSS backgrounds.

Text State Output (render_game_to_text)

Expose a window.render_game_to_text function that returns a concise JSON string representing the current game state. The text should include enough information to play the game without visuals.

Minimal pattern:

function renderGameToText() {
  const payload = {
    mode: state.mode,
    player: { x: state.player.x, y: state.player.y, r: state.player.r },
    entities: state.entities.map((e) => ({ x: e.x, y: e.y, r: e.r })),
    score: state.score,
  };
  return JSON.stringify(payload);
}
window.render_game_to_text = renderGameToText;

Keep the payload succinct and biased toward on-screen/interactive elements. Prefer current, visible entities over full history. Include a clear coordinate system note (origin and axis directions), and encode all player-relevant state: player position/velocity, active obstacles/enemies, collectibles, timers/cooldowns, score, and any mode/state flags needed to make correct decisions. Avoid large histories; only include what's currently relevant and visible.

Time Stepping Hook

Provide a deterministic time-stepping hook so the Playwright client can advance the game in controlled increments. Expose window.advanceTime(ms) (or a thin wrapper that forwards to your game update loop) and have the game loop use it when present. The Playwright test script uses this hook to step frames deterministically during automated testing.

Minimal pattern:

window.advanceTime = (ms) => {
  const steps = Math.max(1, Math.round(ms / (1000 / 60)));
  for (let i = 0; i \x3C steps; i++) update(1 / 60);
  render();
};

Fullscreen Toggle

  • Use a single key (prefer f) to toggle fullscreen on/off.
  • Allow Esc to exit fullscreen.
  • When fullscreen toggles, resize the canvas/rendering so visuals and input mapping stay correct.

Progress Tracking

Create a progress.md file if it doesn't exist, and append TODOs, notes, gotchas, and loose ends as you go so another agent can pick up seamlessly. If a progress.md file already exists, read it first, including the original user prompt at the top (you may be continuing another agent's work). Do not overwrite the original prompt; preserve it. Update progress.md after each meaningful chunk of work (feature added, bug found, test run, or decision made). At the end of your work, leave TODOs and suggestions for the next agent in progress.md.

Playwright Prerequisites

  • Prefer a local playwright dependency if the project already has it.
  • If unsure whether Playwright is available, check for npx:
    command -v npx >/dev/null 2>&1
    
  • If npx is missing, install Node/npm and then install Playwright globally:
    npm install -g @playwright/mcp@latest
    
  • Do not switch to @playwright/test unless explicitly asked; stick to the client script.

Scripts

  • $WEB_GAME_CLIENT (installed default: $CODEX_HOME/skills/develop-web-game/scripts/web_game_playwright_client.js) — Playwright-based action loop with virtual-time stepping, screenshot capture, and console error buffering. You must pass an action burst via --actions-file, --actions-json, or --click.

References

  • $WEB_GAME_ACTIONS (installed default: $CODEX_HOME/skills/develop-web-game/references/action_payloads.json) — example action payloads (keyboard + mouse, per-frame capture). Use these to build your burst.
Usage Guidance
Install or use this only in a trusted ClawHub maintainer workspace. Before running the autoreview helper, prefer --no-yolo or AUTOREVIEW_YOLO=0 unless full filesystem and sandbox-bypass access is intentional. Treat moderation, PR publishing, and Convex commands as authenticated high-impact operations and verify the target before approving writes.
Capability Assessment
Purpose & Capability
The skills are coherent for ClawHub maintenance, moderation, UI proof, Convex setup, migrations, and code review workflows.
Instruction Scope
The autoreview helper documents and implements a default nested Codex command using --dangerously-bypass-approvals-and-sandbox with --sandbox danger-full-access, which is broader than normal review scoping.
Install Mechanism
No hidden installer, obfuscated payload, or unexpected persistence mechanism was found; package scripts and skill files are conventional for a repo-local toolset.
Credentials
Several workflows use authenticated GitHub, ClawHub moderation, Convex, and local repository access; most are disclosed, but the default full-access review mode is not tightly contained.
Persistence & Privilege
The artifacts do not show background persistence, but the default review helper grants high local privilege to a nested agent unless the user opts out with --no-yolo or AUTOREVIEW_YOLO=0.
How to Use
  1. Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
  2. Run the install command in chat: /install develop-web-game
  3. After installation, invoke the skill by name or use /develop-web-game
  4. Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
Version History
v1.0.0
Initial release of “develop-web-game” skill for HTML/JS web game development and automated testing. - Provides a structured workflow for building and testing web games in small increments. - Integrates Playwright-driven test scripts with automated input, pauses, screenshot capture, and state/text inspection. - Requires implementation of `window.advanceTime(ms)` for deterministic time stepping and `window.render_game_to_text` for concise, human-readable game state output. - Includes detailed test checklist and artifact review process for thorough end-to-end interaction validation. - Offers guidelines on canvas layout, visuals, full-screen toggling, and progress tracking to assist seamless multi-agent workflows.
Metadata
Slug develop-web-game
Version 1.0.0
License MIT-0
All-time Installs 0
Active Installs 0
Total Versions 1
Frequently Asked Questions

What is Develop Web Game?

Use when Codex is building or iterating on a web game (HTML/JS) and needs a reliable development + testing loop: implement small changes, run a Playwright-ba... It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 41 downloads so far.

How do I install Develop Web Game?

Run "/install develop-web-game" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.

Is Develop Web Game free?

Yes, Develop Web Game is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.

Which platforms does Develop Web Game support?

Develop Web Game is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).

Who created Develop Web Game?

It is built and maintained by Tbeard602 (@tbeard602); the current version is v1.0.0.

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