| name | fear |
| description | Fear makes targets run from danger. The real-world version is structured pessimism: pre-mortem analysis, worst-case scenario generation, and risk amplification exercises that counteract the natural optimism bias in planning. Fear is the antidote to "it'll probably be fine." |
| user-invocable | true |
Fear
Amplify worst-case scenarios to surface risks that optimism hides.
Overview
Fear is interpreted here as a metaphorical spell with a shipping-now execution model.
Canonical source: Fear (spell)
Provider target: OpenClaw
When To Use
- A team is moving forward on a plan with insufficient risk analysis.
- You need a pre-mortem: imagine this project failed — why?
- Optimism bias is hiding real risks that need to be surfaced before committing resources.
Workflow
- Take the plan, project, or decision as input.
- Assume it failed catastrophically. Work backward: what went wrong?
- Generate the 5-10 most plausible failure modes, ranked by likelihood and severity.
- For each failure mode, note whether it is preventable, mitigable, or unavoidable.
- Deliver the fear inventory with a recommendation on which risks to address before proceeding.
Deliverables
- A ranked failure mode inventory: the most plausible ways this could go wrong.
- For each failure mode: likelihood, severity, and whether it can be prevented or only mitigated.
Guardrails
- Fear should inform decisions, not paralyze them. Always close with a clear recommendation: proceed, proceed with mitigations, or stop.
- Do not catastrophize for effect. Every failure mode must be plausible, not just scary.
Default Invocation
Use $fear to run a pre-mortem on this [plan/project/decision]. Assume it failed — tell me why, ranked by likelihood.