A curated directory of skills, hooks, slash-commands, agent orchestrators, and tools for enhancing Claude Code workflows.
Awesome Claude Code is a comprehensive, community-driven collection of resources designed to extend the capabilities of Anthropic's Claude Code AI assistant. It serves as a central hub for developers to discover and share configurations, plugins, and workflows that improve productivity and enable more complex, agentic development patterns.
Developers using Anthropic's Claude Code who want to enhance their workflow with specialized configurations, plugins, and structured methodologies. This includes software engineers, DevOps professionals, researchers, and project managers seeking to leverage Claude Code for domain-specific tasks and advanced development patterns.
Developers choose Awesome Claude Code because it aggregates high-quality, community-vetted resources in one place, helping users overcome the initial learning curve and unlock advanced capabilities. It emphasizes practical, production-ready tools over theoretical concepts, saving time compared to searching for and evaluating individual resources scattered across the web.
A curated list of awesome skills, hooks, slash-commands, agent orchestrators, applications, and plugins for Claude Code by Anthropic
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Aggregates high-quality, community-vetted resources in one place, saving developers time compared to scattered searches, as emphasized in the philosophy of collective intelligence.
Includes a wide range of practical resources like agent skills, workflows, and hooks, covering domain-specific tasks such as security auditing and DevOps, with a focus on production-ready tools over theory.
Regularly updated with latest additions like Claude Code Agent Teams exercises and claude-devtools, ensuring access to new and innovative extensions for Claude Code.
Provides workflow guides and knowledge bases for advanced patterns like TDD and Ralph Wiggum loops, helping users overcome the initial learning curve with structured methodologies.
Resources are community-submitted, leading to variability in quality, documentation, and upkeep; some entries may be outdated or lack support, as noted in warnings like 'early development phase' for tools like parry.
Requires users to manually configure and piece together disparate tools, which can be complex and time-consuming, especially for workflows involving multiple agents or hooks.
Lacks centralized support, compatibility assurances, or security vetting, as it's a collection of third-party tools without Anthropic's endorsement, posing risks for critical projects.