Blueprints
Blueprints are the starting templates in Vibespace. If you are new, think of a blueprint as “the style of workspace you want to start”.
Choosing a blueprint
Here is the easiest way to think about the four choices:
- Code Studio: Ideal for dense, software-building tasks
- Startup Machine: Ideal for exploring and executing any business or casual idea
- Think Tank: Ideal for research-heavy tasks and brainstorming
- Custom: Ideal for anyone who wants to try their own configuration
The blueprints are only guidance. There is rarely a wrong choice, and you can always speak with your lead agent to edit or overhaul the existing structure of your vibespace.
Code Studio
Code Studio is for product work, app ideas, features, and codebases.
Use it when you want an agent team to build, fix, explore, or extend software.
Good use cases
- building a new app
- exploring an existing codebase
- shipping features
- debugging or cleaning up a project
- prototyping a product idea
What you fill in
- project name
- what you are building
- workspace mode
- tech stack, if you want to give extra context
- repository URL, if you already have one
What happens next
The lead agent reads your brief, looks at the repo if you included one, and starts organizing the work. If needed, it can bring in more agents for focused tasks.
Choosing a workspace mode
Worktreeis better when you want agents to work in parallel with clearer separation.Shared filesystemis better when you want everyone working in one place.
Startup Machine
Startup Machine is for business ideas, offers, and existing companies that need direction.
Use it when you want a lead agent to think like an operator, founder, or AI CEO and coordinate the next steps.
Good use cases
- testing a startup idea
- mapping out a new offer
- improving an existing business
- planning growth, positioning, or execution
- turning a rough idea into a structured plan
What you fill in
- business name
- business type
- description
- website URL, if one already exists
What happens next
The lead agent studies the business context, decides what kind of help is needed, and can spin up other agents to cover strategy, research, product, design, or growth.
Think Tank
Think Tank is for analysis, research, and synthesis.
Use it when the goal is to understand something clearly before you act on it.
Good use cases
- researching a market or category
- comparing options before making a decision
- brainstorming directions
- preparing a report or structured summary
- getting a deep overview of a topic
What you fill in
- research topic
- what you want to know
- output format
- research depth
What happens next
The lead agent breaks the topic into angles, gathers findings, and organizes the result into the output style you chose.
Custom Blueprints
Custom Blueprints are for workflows you want to reuse.
Use them when the built-in blueprints are close, but not quite right.
Custom Blueprints are not recommended for new users.
What you control
- the blueprint name and description
- the icon and color
- the form fields people fill in before launch
- the first agent’s identity
- the prompt template
- the kickoff message
What to keep in mind
Start simple. If the first version asks for too much or tries to do too much, it becomes harder to reuse. A good custom blueprint usually has:
- a clear purpose
- only the fields that matter
- one strong lead agent
- a kickoff message that gets the work moving quickly