Endless thrashing
Agents loop, rewrite, and burn context because “done” was never made testable.
100+ production-grade prompts, ordered stacks, and operational templates for builders who need agents to finish long jobs, stay inside boundaries, and prove what they did.
Real agent work fails somewhere else entirely.
Agents loop, rewrite, and burn context because “done” was never made testable.
Work gets declared complete without running the checks that would prove it.
Tools touch money, data, or production without caps, ledgers, or stop conditions.
Every pattern turns intent into a bounded contract: define the work, execute inside constraints, verify the result, store proof, then pass the gate.
Ready for Codex, Claude Code, Cursor, Grok Build, and similar harnesses.
Sequenced prompt sets for shipping products, stopping thrash, and running teams.
A practical dashboard structure for proofs, spend, revenue loops, and gates.
AGENTS.md, proof blocks, work contracts, dispatch packets, and spend ledgers.
Optional starter data to bootstrap the operational dashboard without busywork.
Scope → contract → build → verify → release
9 promptsDiagnose → narrow → checkpoint → finish
7 promptsInventory → boundaries → runtime → proof store
12 promptsOwnership → dispatch → handoffs → integration
11 promptsBudget → cap → authorize → ledger → reconcile
8 promptsVAPL grew out of a year spent shipping real agent infrastructure: local-first runtimes, proof-producing workflows, fail-closed safety gates, and economic loops that cannot spend without caps and ledgers.
The library is the reusable operating discipline behind that work. It was built for the moment when “the agent said it finished” stops being good enough.
“A claim without evidence is not completion.” Every critical step should leave a proof an operator can inspect.
“Money-moving tools belong behind hard gates.” Caps, authorization, append-only ledgers, and reconciliation come first.
“Local-first is an operational boundary.” Keep sensitive execution close when privacy, latency, or control matters.
Download the complete library, ordered stacks, dashboard blueprint, and operational templates.
You can regenerate something similar over a weekend. What you are buying is curation, sequencing, fail-closed defaults, and the time saved avoiding fluent mush without gates.
The prompts are written for agent harnesses such as Codex, Claude Code, Cursor, and Grok Build. They rely on general agent capabilities rather than one vendor's proprietary format.
No. VAPL is a one-time $29 purchase delivered digitally through Gumroad.
Yes. If the library does not help within seven days, request a full refund. You can keep the downloaded files.