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Product Hunt Viberia

Command AI agents like you're playing Civilization

120
Traction Score
19
Discussions
May 20, 2026
Launch Date
View Origin Link

Product Positioning & Context

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.
Productivity Developer Tools Artificial Intelligence

Related Ecosystem & Alternatives

Discover adjacent products, open-source repositories, and developer tools sharing similar technical architecture.

Deep-Dive FAQs

What is Viberia?
Viberia is a digital product or tool described as: Command AI agents like you're playing Civilization
Where did Viberia originate?
Data for Viberia was aggregated directly from the Product Hunt community ecosystem, representing raw developer and early-adopter sentiment.
When was Viberia publicly launched?
The initial public indexing or launch date for Viberia within our tracked developer communities was recorded on May 20, 2026.
How popular is Viberia?
Viberia has achieved measurable traction, logging over 120 traction score and facilitating 19 recorded discussions or engagements.
Which technical categories define Viberia?
Based on metadata extraction, Viberia is categorized under topics such as: Productivity, Developer Tools, Artificial Intelligence.
Are there open-source alternatives related to Viberia?
Yes, the GitHub ecosystem contains correlated projects. For example, a repository named HKUDS/Vibe-Trading shares highly similar architectural descriptions and topics.
How does the creator describe Viberia?
The original author or development team describes the product as follows: "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..."

Community Voice & Feedback

[Redacted] • May 20, 2026
pretty cool concept@emre_barut! Curious what are your thoughts regarding visualization/ui/ux for the management of tasks and projects rather than teams and agents? I feel like grooming tasks of different stages (e.g. developing prototypes to get more clarity, or, when enough clarity has been reached, making sure the architecture/plan is good) is a place where bottlenecks are moving into (besides the actual pipeline of how a team of agents handles work)also...pretty fun to see the Lion as the chief/mayor in the pictures, got a bit of zootopia vibes which I thought was lovely
[Redacted] • May 20, 2026
This is a great initiative, just wanted to know if you thought of adding an additional feature where different agents remember your codebase and you don’t have to give the context again and again. So my main thought is if we are working on a project so you can divide these agents into teams say frontend, backend team and all the agents works in accordance to each other. If changes are made then all the teams are informed so that every agents works accordingly and there are less coding conflicts. This feature can also save you credits usage.
[Redacted] • May 20, 2026
Ahah seems so fun, but how do you connect them ? All by one on Claude ? Or another one ?
[Redacted] • May 20, 2026
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:Viberia solves visibility, which is a real problem, but the harder one — agents confidently doing the wrong thing — doesn't get easier with a nicer interfaceOh 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.
[Redacted] • May 20, 2026
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.
[Redacted] • May 20, 2026
Congrats on the launch, Emre! I am really curious about the architecture under the hood. As these agents collaborate, hand off work, and pick up new skills, is there a knowledge graph getting formed on the backend from each LLM to manage their shared context and relationships?
[Redacted] • May 20, 2026
really cool idea-feels very different from usual list based tools? Also I am excited to know how you manage it when there are a lot of agents, doesn't it get messy?
[Redacted] • May 19, 2026
Hey Product Hunt!I’m Emre, Viberia’s solo builder.I spent the last year drowning in terminal and IDE windows trying to keep up with my own agents. MCPs, subagents, skills, hooks, modes and more. I tried Conductor, Claude Squad, Gas Town and others. They all felt the same after a while, just a long list of things waiting on my attention.So, I went the other way. What if managing your agents felt like playing a game of Civilization or SimCity? You zoom out and see your whole AI org on an isometric map, with status icons telling you who’s blocked, who’s asking a question, who’s done. You zoom in and chat with anyone. The agents collaborate, hand work off to each other, and over time they build their own little teams and pick up new skills.A few things worth knowing:- The harness is built around teams/buildings, these are agents that work together (and/or in a sequence) to deliver what you need (e.g., write PRD first, write code later, and then review). I saw my own productivity and output increase significantly when I started using agents in a sequence, and this is one of the core differentiators of Viberia.- It’s free and will stay free; you just need to bring your own subscription and/or API keys. It works with Claude, GPT and Gemini.- Docs, terminals, browsers are all built in. No app-switching.- It’s a Tauri app. Roughly 8x less energy than the closest competitor I benchmarked, so you can actually use it at a coffee shop on battery.The product is still in early alpha. There will be bugs and missing features. Please tell me about them. I read every comment, and I’ll personally chase every bug and feature request. My goal is to make Viberia the most efficient, capable, and fun agent harness out there.Cheers,Emre

Discovery Source

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Tech Stack Dependencies

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Deep Research & Science

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