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[ARTICLE · art-57819] src=dev.to ↗ pub= topic=developer-tools verified=true sentiment=· neutral

Developers are not searching for more powerful Claude Code skills. They are searching for taste.

A developer analyzing search trends for Claude Code skills found that developers are increasingly searching for skills that enforce restraint and taste rather than adding more power. The most installed skills, such as 'caveman,' focus on governing output and reducing complexity, with 343k developers choosing a governor over additional agents. The gap between the discourse on complex multi-agent stacks and actual installs reveals a demand for judgment and predictability over horsepower.

read2 min views1 publishedJul 13, 2026

Pull the Google Trends breakout list for Claude Code skills this week and the demand does not match the discourse.

The loud posts are still about the 132-agent mega-stack: dozens of subagents, a wall of MCP servers, nested orchestration, a CLAUDE.md the length of a short novel. But the skills that are actually breaking out in search, and the ones developers are actually installing, lean the other way. They are about restraint. About taste. About making the model do less, more predictably.

That gap between what gets talked about and what gets installed is the whole story.

Here is the shortlist from the live catalog, refreshed daily from skills.sh, GitHub and MCP registries and ranked by real installs. Every one of these makes the output better and quieter rather than handing the agent more power.

None of these add a tool. None of these spawn a subagent. Every one narrows what the model is allowed to do and how it is allowed to sound.

A more powerful setup gives you more surface area to go wrong. Another MCP server is another routing decision the agent can fumble. Another subagent is another context window to keep coherent. The marginal agent you bolt on rarely earns the coordination cost.

caveman is the clearest case. It adds no capability at all. What it does is govern the output, and 343k developers decided that governor was worth more to them than another agent. Most people, most of the time, will make the same call, and the install numbers say a lot of them already have.

There is a search signal underneath this too. When someone types "taste" or "stop slop" or "minimal" into Google, they are not looking for capability. They already have capability. They are looking for a governor on it. The breakout terms are the tell: the demand is for judgment, not horsepower.

If you are stacking agents to feel productive, try deleting most of them and adding one taste skill instead. The install-ranked catalog says you will not miss the agents. Skillselion is an independent directory of Claude Code, Codex and Cursor skills, MCP servers and marketplaces, ranked by real installs. Not affiliated with Anthropic, OpenAI or Cursor.

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