| name | ss-verify |
| description | The VISUAL gate — render the UI, screenshot it, and score what you actually SEE, not what the code says. Catches the tells that only show up in pixels (dead whitespace, cramping, a hero that doesn't dominate, fonts that didn't load, real rendered color, the squint "does this look AI-made" test) — the things /ss-score can't read from source. Renders empty/loading/error states too, then fixes and re-renders until it passes. Use as the final gate on any screen you can render. |
| argument-hint | [route or file] [--surface mobile|desktop] — e.g. "/dashboard --surface desktop" |
| allowed-tools | Read, Write, Edit, Grep, Glob, Bash |
Verify (look at it, don't just read it)
/ss-score reads the code and scores it. But some of the worst "AI-made" tells never appear
in source — they only exist in pixels: a hero that doesn't actually dominate, a lower third
of dead whitespace, cramped cards, a web font that silently failed to load and fell back to
Times, two colors that look like two accents once rendered, text that's unreadable on its real
background. A human sees these in half a second; a code-reading gate misses all of them.
/ss-verify closes that gap: it renders the UI, screenshots it, and you look at the image —
then score the same StyleSeed gate against what you see, fix, and re-render. This is the gate
that most predicts whether a real user will say "this looks designed."
Run it as the final gate after /ss-score passes — code-clean is necessary but not
sufficient; pixel-clean is the real bar.
When NOT to use
- Nothing renderable yet (pure logic/config, or a component with no host page) → use
/ss-score.
- No way to render at all (no browser, no Playwright, headless blocked) → say so, fall back to
/ss-score, and tell the user the visual gate was skipped. Never claim you verified visually
if you didn't actually see a screenshot.
- A quick pre-commit pass →
/ss-lint. /ss-verify is heavier (it boots a renderer).
Step 1 — Render it
Get a real screenshot. In priority order:
A. Running project (Next / Vite / etc.) — the normal case.
- Start the dev server in the background (
npm run dev / pnpm dev / framework command); wait
for the ready line and capture the port.
- Screenshot the route with headless Chromium via Playwright. If the project has
playwright
in node_modules, use it; else use a globally cached Chromium. Minimal script:
import { chromium } from "playwright";
const b = await chromium.launch();
const c = await b.newContext({ viewport: SURFACE, deviceScaleFactor: 2 });
const p = await c.newPage();
await p.goto(URL, { waitUntil: "networkidle" });
await p.evaluate(() => document.fonts.ready);
await p.waitForTimeout(400);
await p.screenshot({ path: OUT, fullPage: true });
await b.close();
Surface viewports: mobile {width:390,height:844} · desktop {width:1440,height:900}.
Pick from the lock's Surface, or --surface.
- If a browser MCP (claude-in-chrome) is available instead, navigate + screenshot with that.
B. Static HTML file → open it directly with file://… and screenshot (same script).
C. Isolated component (no host page) → render it into a minimal throwaway page that imports
the component with realistic props, then screenshot that.
Then actually READ the screenshot back (Read the PNG). You must see it. Shoot at
deviceScaleFactor: 2 so text is crisp enough to judge.
Step 2 — Score what you SEE (the visual gate)
Look at the image and run the StyleSeed gate perceptually. These are the checks that need
eyes, not source:
□ Squint test — blur your focus / imagine it at 50%. Does it still read "AI-generated"?
(bland gradient, pill button + generic sans, icon-chip row, even flat grid) → FAIL
□ Focal — does ONE element actually dominate at a glance? If your eye lands nowhere,
or on an all-even grid, the focal point failed regardless of what code intended
□ Balance — dead whitespace (a lower third of empty), or cramped/colliding elements?
Is the visual weight distributed, or all top-left / all-centered?
□ Fonts loaded — is the intended typeface actually rendering, or a Times/Arial fallback?
(a silent font-load fail is a top "looks cheap" tell — invisible in code)
□ One accent (seen) — count the hues you actually SEE. Two things competing for "the color" = FAIL,
even if the code named one token
□ Contrast (seen) — any text you have to strain to read on its real rendered background?
Light-grey-on-white labels, low-contrast on a colored/照片 panel
□ Rhythm/optics — are edges aligned, gaps consistent, cards optically even? Off-by-a-few-px
misalignments that read as "sloppy" but pass a code check
□ Type scale fit — on desktop, does the body text look too small for the canvas? does the hero
feel undersized? (the surface-scale tell, judged by eye)
□ Motion (if any) — capture before/after or a mid-transition frame; is it purposeful, or the
"cheap fade/bounce on everything" tell? does it block the first read?
Step 3 — Render the STATES too (not just the happy path)
The happy-path screenshot hides the most common real-world failure: no empty / loading / error
state. Where the surface has a data view, render those variants (a query param, a mock, a
forced prop, or temporarily emptying the data) and screenshot each. A blank white void for "no
data" is a fail you can only catch by looking at the empty state. (Static marketing pages with
no data surface → N/A, note it.)
Step 4 — Fix, re-render, repeat
For each visual failure, fix the code, then re-render and look again — don't assume the fix
worked from the diff (the whole point is that code ≠ pixels). Loop up to ~3×. Present only when
the screenshot passes, with the final image, a one-line "fixed: …", and the gate result.
Rules
- You must actually see a screenshot. No render, no visual verdict — fall back to
/ss-score
and say the visual gate was skipped. Never fabricate "looks good."
- Re-render after every fix. The reason this skill exists is that source and pixels diverge;
verifying a visual fix by reading the diff defeats it.
- Both gates, in order:
/ss-score (code) first to catch structural issues cheaply, then
/ss-verify (pixels) as the final bar. /ss-build runs code-gate in its loop; finish a
renderable screen with /ss-verify.
- Clean up: stop the dev server you started; delete any throwaway harness/mock files.
- Shoot at 2× and at the locked surface's viewport — judging a desktop app on a 390px shot
(or vice-versa) invalidates the type-scale and balance checks.