Christian Nennemann ebe943a67e refactor: realistic shadows for Claude behavior
- Creator: Perfectionist → Over-Architect (Claude over-designs, doesn't endlessly revise)
- Maker: Cowboy → Rogue (same behavior, better name)
- Trickster: Saboteur → False Alarm (Claude floods with noise, doesn't sabotage)
2026-04-02 18:50:40 +00:00

ArcheFlow

Multi-agent orchestration with Jungian archetypes for Claude Code.

ArcheFlow gives Claude Code a structured way to coordinate multiple agents through quality cycles. Instead of one agent doing everything, specialized archetypes collaborate through PDCA cycles — Plan, Do, Check, Act — where each iteration builds on feedback from the last.

Zero dependencies. No build step. Just install and go.

The PDCA Cycle

         Act ──────────── Done ✓
           Check (Guardian + Skeptic + Sage review in parallel)
           Do (Maker implements in isolated worktree)
          Plan (Explorer researches → Creator designs)     ← Cycle 2
           Act ─┘ (issues found → feed back)
│              ↑
│         Check
│              ↑
│          Do
│              ↑
│         Plan                                              ← Cycle 1

Each cycle produces better results. No unreviewed code reaches your main branch.

The Seven Archetypes

Each archetype has a virtue (its unique contribution) and shadows (what happens when the virtue is pushed too far):

Archetype Virtue Shadow
Explorer Contextual Clarity Rabbit Hole
Creator Decisive Framing Over-Architect
Maker Execution Discipline Rogue
Guardian Threat Intuition Paranoid
Skeptic Assumption Surfacing Paralytic
Trickster Adversarial Creativity False Alarm
Sage Maintainability Judgment Bureaucrat

ArcheFlow detects shadow activation and course-corrects automatically.

Built-in Workflows

Workflow Cycles Archetypes Best For
fast 1 Creator → Maker → Guardian Bug fixes, small changes
standard 2 Explorer + Creator → Maker → Guardian + Skeptic + Sage Features, refactors
thorough 3 Explorer + Creator → Maker → All 4 reviewers Security-critical, public APIs

Autonomous Mode

ArcheFlow can run fully unattended — queue your tasks, walk away, read the results in the morning:

  • Self-organizing: Archetypes coordinate through PDCA cycles without human input
  • Self-correcting: Failed reviews trigger automatic revision cycles
  • Safe: All code stays on worktree branches until all reviewers approve
  • Visible: Full session log with every decision, finding, and merge
  • Cancellable: Stop at any time. Incomplete work stays on branches.
  • Reversible: Every merge is individually revertable

Install

# From the plugin marketplace (when published)
claude plugin install archeflow

# From Git
claude plugin install --url https://git.xorwell.de/c/claude-archeflow-plugin

# Local development
claude --plugin-dir ./archeflow

What's Inside

archeflow/
├── .claude-plugin/plugin.json       # Plugin manifest
├── skills/
│   ├── using-archeflow/             # Bootstrap — loaded at session start
│   ├── orchestration/               # Step-by-step PDCA execution
│   ├── plan-phase/                  # Explorer + Creator protocols
│   ├── do-phase/                    # Maker implementation rules
│   ├── check-phase/                 # Reviewer protocols (all 4)
│   ├── shadow-detection/            # Recognizing and correcting dysfunction
│   ├── attention-filters/           # What context each archetype receives
│   ├── autonomous-mode/             # Unattended overnight sessions
│   ├── custom-archetypes/           # Creating domain-specific roles
│   └── workflow-design/             # Designing custom workflows
├── agents/
│   ├── explorer.md                  # Research agent (Haiku)
│   ├── creator.md                   # Design agent (Sonnet)
│   ├── maker.md                     # Implementation agent (Sonnet)
│   ├── guardian.md                  # Security reviewer (Sonnet)
│   ├── skeptic.md                   # Assumption challenger (Sonnet)
│   ├── trickster.md                 # Adversarial tester (Haiku)
│   └── sage.md                      # Quality reviewer (Sonnet)
├── hooks/
│   ├── hooks.json                   # SessionStart hook config
│   └── session-start                # Bootstrap script
└── examples/
    ├── feature-implementation.md    # Standard workflow walkthrough
    ├── security-review.md           # Thorough workflow walkthrough
    └── custom-workflow.yaml         # Custom workflow template

How It Works

ArcheFlow is pure skills and agents — no runtime, no server, no dependencies.

  • Skills teach Claude Code when and how to orchestrate (behavioral rules)
  • Agents define each archetype's persona and review protocol
  • Hooks inject ArcheFlow context at session start automatically
  • Git worktrees provide isolation — each Maker works on a separate branch

Claude Code's native Agent tool spawns the archetypes. Git worktrees provide isolation. Markdown artifacts provide communication between phases. Nothing else needed.

Extending ArcheFlow

Custom Archetypes

Add domain-specific roles (database reviewer, compliance auditor, etc.):

# .archeflow/archetypes/db-specialist.md
## Identity
**ID:** db-specialist
**Role:** Reviews database schemas and migration safety
**Lens:** "Will this scale? Will this corrupt data?"
...

Custom Workflows

Design your own workflow:

# .archeflow/workflows/api-design.yaml
pdca:
  plan: { archetypes: [explorer, creator] }
  do: { archetypes: [maker] }
  check: { archetypes: [guardian, skeptic, trickster] }
  act: { exit_when: all_approved, max_cycles: 2 }

Philosophy

ArcheFlow is built on three beliefs:

  1. Strength has a shadow. Every capability becomes destructive when unchecked. The Explorer who won't stop researching. The Guardian who blocks everything. The Maker who ships without review. ArcheFlow names these shadows and corrects them.

  2. Quality is a spiral, not a gate. A single review pass misses things. PDCA cycles spiral upward — each cycle catches what the previous one missed, until the reviewers have nothing left to find.

  3. Autonomy needs structure. Agents left to their own devices produce mediocre results. Agents given clear roles, typed communication, and quality gates produce exceptional work — even overnight, even unattended.

License

MIT

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