Programmers, Face the Inspection — A Dog Created Its Own Game Using Vibe Coding
An enthusiast named Christian Selig decided to test whether the Claude neural network could create working code if the input wasn't a clear technical specification, but an absolutely random set of characters.
- He placed a wireless keyboard in front of his dog named Hugo.
- Hugo, unaware of his new role as lead game designer, simply walked across the keys and lay on them for a bit.
- Christian fed the resulting "gibberish" (like asdfghjk...) to the Claude AI with a single instruction: "Here is my input, turn this into a game."
The neural network not only didn't break, it interpreted the random keypresses as the basis for game mechanics. The result was a working game.