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scope-guard

// Use this skill BEFORE implementing any new feature. This is NON-NEGOTIABLE for scope control. Use when evaluating features during brainstorming, planning new functionality, branches approach size limits (1000/1500/2000 lines, 15/25/30 commits). Do not use when feature is already approved and in prog

$ git log --oneline --stat
stars:201
forks:38
updated:March 4, 2026
SKILL.mdreadonly
SKILL.md Frontmatter
namescope-guard
descriptionPre-implementation scope control: evaluate feature necessity and enforce branch size limits
version1.9.0
alwaysApplyfalse
categoryworkflow-methodology
tagsanti-overengineering,scope,YAGNI,prioritization,backlog
dependencies
tools
usage_patternsfeature-evaluation,scope-validation,threshold-monitoring,backlog-management
complexityintermediate
model_hintstandard
estimated_tokens2500
modulesmodules/decision-framework.md,modules/github-integration.md,modules/anti-overengineering.md,modules/branch-management.md,modules/baseline-scenarios.md

Building more than what is needed takes choices away from those who work here next. Scope-guard is humility and foresight: preserving freedom by building only what is earned.

Table of Contents

Scope Guard

Prevents overengineering by both Claude and human during the brainstorm→plan→execute workflow. Forces explicit evaluation of every proposed feature against business value, opportunity cost, and branch constraints.

Philosophy

Core Belief: Not all features deserve implementation. Most ideas should be deferred to backlog until proven necessary.

Three Pillars:

  1. Worthiness Scoring - Quantify value vs cost before building
  2. Opportunity Cost - Compare against existing backlog
  3. Branch Discipline - Respect size thresholds

When To Use

  • During brainstorming sessions before documenting designs
  • During planning sessions before finalizing implementation plans
  • When evaluating "should we add this?" decisions
  • Automatically via hooks when branches approach thresholds
  • When proposing new features, abstractions, or patterns

When NOT To Use

  • Bug fixes with clear, bounded scope
  • Documentation-only changes
  • Trivial single-file edits (< 50 lines)
  • Emergency production fixes

Quick Start

1. Score the Feature

Use the Worthiness formula:

(Business Value + Time Criticality + Risk Reduction) / (Complexity + Token Cost + Scope Drift)

Verification: Run the command with --help flag to verify availability.

See decision-framework.md for details.

Thresholds:

  • > 2.0 → Implement now
  • 1.0 - 2.0 → Discuss first
  • < 1.0 → Defer to backlog

2. Check Against Backlog

Compare against docs/backlog/queue.md:

  • Does it beat top queued items?
  • Is there room in branch budget?

3. Verify Branch Budget

Default: 3 major features per branch

If at capacity, must drop existing feature, split to new branch, or justify override.

4. Monitor Thresholds

Watch for Yellow/Red zones:

  • Lines: 1000/1500/2000
  • Commits: 15/25/30
  • Days: 3/7/7+

See branch-management.md for monitoring.

Core Workflow

Step 1: Calculate Worthiness (scope-guard:worthiness-scored)

Score each factor (1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13):

  • Value Factors: Business Value, Time Criticality, Risk Reduction
  • Cost Factors: Complexity, Token Cost, Scope Drift

Details: decision-framework.md

Step 2: Compare Against Backlog (scope-guard:backlog-compared)

  1. Check docs/backlog/queue.md for existing items
  2. Compare Worthiness Scores
  3. New item must beat top queued item OR fit within branch budget

Step 3: Check Branch Budget (scope-guard:budget-checked)

Count current features in branch. If at budget (default: 3), new feature requires:

  • Dropping an existing feature, OR
  • Splitting to new branch, OR
  • Explicit override with justification

Step 4: Document Decision (scope-guard:decision-documented)

Record outcome:

  • Implementing: Note Worthiness Score and budget slot
  • Deferring (MANDATORY STEPS):
    1. Create GitHub issue immediately - See github-integration.md Steps 1-3
    2. Mark scope-guard:github-issue-created complete
    3. Create Discussion - See github-integration.md Step 4. Prompt: "Creating a Discussion with full reasoning context. [Y/n]" Publishing is the default. If the user explicitly declines, skip Discussion creation. If publishing fails, continue.
    4. Optionally add to docs/backlog/queue.md with issue link
  • Rejecting: Document why (low value, out of scope)

IMPORTANT: Deferral is NOT complete until a GitHub issue exists. This prevents context loss when branches are merged or abandoned.

Anti-Overengineering Rules

Key Principles:

  • Ask clarifying questions BEFORE proposing solutions
  • No abstraction until 3rd use case
  • Defer "nice to have" features
  • Stay within branch budget

See anti-overengineering.md for full rules and red flags.

Backlog Management

Directory Structure

**Verification:** Run the command with `--help` flag to verify availability.
docs/backlog/
├── queue.md              # Active ranked queue
└── archive/
    ├── ideas.md          # Deferred feature ideas
    ├── optimizations.md  # Deferred performance work
    ├── refactors.md      # Deferred cleanup
    └── abstractions.md   # Deferred patterns

Verification: Run the command with --help flag to verify availability.

Queue Rules

  • Max 10 items in active queue
  • Items older than 30 days without pickup → move to archive
  • Re-score monthly or when project context changes

Adding to Queue

When deferring, add to docs/backlog/queue.md:

| Rank | Item | Worthiness | Added | Branch/Epic | Category |
|------|------|------------|-------|-------------|----------|
| 1 | [New item description] | 1.8 | 2025-12-08 | current-branch | idea |

Verification: Run the command with --help flag to verify availability.

Re-rank by Worthiness Score after adding.

Integration Points

With superpowers:brainstorming

At end of brainstorming, before documenting design:

  1. List all proposed features/components
  2. Score each with Worthiness formula
  3. Defer items scoring < 1.0 to backlog
  4. Check branch budget for remaining items

Self-invoke prompt: "Before documenting this design, let me evaluate the proposed features with scope-guard."

With superpowers:writing-plans

Before finalizing implementation plan:

  1. Verify all planned items have Worthiness > 1.0
  2. Compare against backlog queue
  3. Confirm within branch budget
  4. Document any deferrals

Self-invoke prompt: "Before finalizing this plan, let me verify scope with scope-guard."

During superpowers:executing-plans

Periodically during execution:

  1. Run threshold check: lines, files, commits, days
  2. Warn if Yellow zone reached
  3. Require justification if Red zone reached

Self-invoke prompt: "This branch has grown significantly. Let me check scope-guard thresholds."

Required TodoWrite Items

When evaluating a feature, create these todos:

  1. scope-guard:worthiness-scored
  2. scope-guard:backlog-compared
  3. scope-guard:budget-checked
  4. scope-guard:github-issue-created (MANDATORY if deferring - blocks step 5)
  5. scope-guard:decision-documented

Note: Step 4 (github-issue-created) is REQUIRED when deferring items. You cannot mark decision-documented complete without first completing github-issue-created for deferrals.

Related Skills

  • superpowers:brainstorming - Ideation workflow this guards
  • superpowers:writing-plans - Planning workflow this validates
  • imbue:review-core - Review methodology pattern

Module Reference