Why Garry Tan’s Claude Code setup has gotten so much love, and hate
“I sleep, like, four hours a night right now,” he told his interviewer, fellow VC Bill Gurley, during an onstage interview Saturday.
(At least, we hope he was joking. AI-induced psychosis can actually be a dangerous condition. ) “Once you try it, you’ll realize: It’s like I was able to re-create my startup that took $10 million in VC capital and 10 people, and I worked on that for two years, and I took anti-narcoleptics — I remember, you know, sort of being on modafinil,” he described, referencing the sleep-preventing drug that’s popular with the startup hustle-culture crowd.
(Tan sold his Y Combinator-backed blogging startup Posterous to Twitter back in 2012. )
But now, his psyche is so amped working with AI agents, it’s a natural insomnia.
“I don’t need modafinil with this revolution.
“I wanted to sleep more, but I couldn’t because: Let’s see what’s going on with the 10 workers.
I’ve got like three different projects going right now.
The setup included six “opinionated” Claude Code skills he developed.
Skills are reusable prompts stored in special “skill.
md” files that instruct the AI how to behave in specific roles or tasks. “I’ve been having such an amazing time with Claude Code, I wanted you to be able to have my *exact* skill setup,” he posted on X.
He called his Claude Code setup “gstack.
” Since then he’s added several more skills. The gstack GitHub repository currently lists 13, but it seems like every hour Tan tweets about something new.
In one post, he gave an example of how his setup works.
First, he gets Claude’s opinion on whether a startup idea or feature is a good idea using a skill where Claude acts like CEO. He uses another skill to have Claude write the feature as an engineer, and another to review its own work for bugs and security issues as a code reviewer. Other skills cover design, documentation, and so on. The love for gstack began immediately: His tweet went viral on X and trended on Product Hunt.
But shortly after releasing gstack, Tan posted a tweet that caused a heap of hate, too.
To quote just a few of the many hater comments that followed: One founder posted to X: “(1) Garry should be embarrassed for tweeting this.
(2) If it’s true, that CTO should be fired immediately.
The vlogger summarized the common complaint: Developers who use Claude Code already have their own versions of this. Added one person on Product Hunt, “Garry, let’s be clear and honest: if you weren’t the CEO of YC, this wouldn’t be on PH. ” So who’s right? Is gstack a uniquely useful way to work with Claude Code? Or unremarkable? To find out, I asked the experts, including Claude (which, not surprisingly, absolutely loved it).
I also queried ChatGPT and Gemini, both of which were surprisingly positive.
“The real insight here is that AI coding works best when you simulate an engineering org structure.
Not when you just ask: ‘build this feature. ’” Gemini called the setup “sophisticated,” adding that “gstack is essentially a ‘Pro’ configuration.
It is less about making coding easier and more about making it correct.
” Claude called gstack “a mature, opinionated system built by someone who actually uses it heavily,” adding, “It’s one of the better examples of Claude Code skill design out there. ” We’ll take that as a thumbs-up from an expert on the topic. On Monday, Tan explained in another X post, “I took modafinil just to stay awake longer to be able to turn the momentary crystalline structures I had in my brain into lines of code before sleep or human distraction turned it to grains of sand.
I love coding but I love coding with AI even more.
I speak it listens and we create. I see the structure and it is built. There is no more powerful an experience to me than that. ” Tan did not respond to multiple requests for comment
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