
Viberia
Command AI agents like you're playing Civilization
320 followers
Command AI agents like you're playing Civilization
320 followers
Do you like your Claude/Codex pet but wish you had a zoo? Viberia is a spatial command center for your AI agents. Your whole AI org lives on an isometric map, status icons show who’s blocked, who’s asking, who’s done. Zoom in to chat with anyone, pick any model, bring your own keys. Agents collaborate, build their own little teams, and pick up new skills as they go. Docs, terminals, browsers built in.










Cosmic
Congrats on the launch! The UX metaphor is doing a lot of work hereL 'commanding agents like units' is intuitive in a way that most orchestration UIs completely miss. The real test is whether it scales to non-technical operators who need to run complex workflows without understanding what's happening underneath. Rooting for this.
Viberia
@tonyspiro Thank you!
Word.
IMHO, they need to be able to peek under the hood and ask an agent to explain what's happening, just like you can sit down with an employee and grill them on the details. Viberia gives you the backend and the interface for this. Getting the UI/UX to a point where users naturally do that is my next focus.
Cosmic
@emre_barut That 'explain yourself' interaction is exactly the right design target. The agents that win long term are the ones that can show their work, not just do the work. Most orchestration UIs treat the reasoning as an implementation detail. You're right that it needs to be a first-class UI primitive. The non-technical operator needs to feel like they're managing a team, not operating a black box. Following the build closely.
Viberia
Viberia just got a shoutout in today's daily digest (huge THANK YOU to whoever wrote it!). One thing I want to push back on though:
Oh but it does. The agents work with each other, so you can have them review each other's work. Viberia is the interface for chaining agent flows on top of each other, like stacking buildings in Factorio. If they're unsure, they'll pull you in anyway.
Yes, today's models aren't 100% reliable at this yet, but if you call multiple models from different providers and have each one give feedback (that's exactly what the Council building is for), your chances of an error drop a lot.
The map metaphor genuinely caught me off guard! I was expecting another terminal-style dashboard. Seeing agent state laid out spatially is a completely different mental model. What I want to know is whether this updates in real time or if there's a delay. When you're managing 10+ agents, a 5-second lag on state changes would make the whole visual pretty unreliable.
This is a really interesting approach—turning agent orchestration into something visual and spatial feels way more intuitive than juggling multiple tools.
Curious though: how well does context persist across agents over time? Do you still find yourself re-explaining things, or does the system actually reduce that friction?
Also really like the idea of treating buildings as task flows—feels flexible without locking users into one structure.
Gamification of tasks that slowly turn mundane is one of my favourite concepts ever and I LOVE what Viberia is doing with it. Most agent workflows right now feel so dead to interact with after a while.
Sadly I couldn't try it out right away since I'm not on MacOS, but instantly waitlisted myself. (From the demo itself, the characters got my heart instantly!)
The whole commanding-units style approach makes managing workflows less mentally draining for sure.
Really rooting for this one!