67 Claude Skills That Turn a $20 Subscription Into a Full Dev Team

Most people use Claude like a $20 autocomplete They type. They get an answer. They move on > They have no idea Claude can run an entire dev team - architect, reviewer, debugger, docs writer - all at

Top 67 Claude Skills That Turn a $20 Subscription Into a Full Dev Team
Source: https://x.com/polydao/status/2044317956893471081?s=52

Most people treat Claude like a smarter autocomplete. They type a prompt, get an answer, copy, paste, done. And honestly… I used to do the same.

But in a recent post on X, @polydao breaks down something far more powerful: 67 Claude “Skills” that can effectively turn a simple subscription into what feels like a full development team. Architect. Reviewer. Debugger. Documentation writer. All working in sync.

So what’s a skill?

It’s essentially a folder with a SKILL.md file that tells Claude exactly how to perform a specific task. Step by step. With constraints. With examples. Instead of re-explaining your workflow every single session, you install it once and reuse it forever. That shift alone changes how you work.

The thread highlights key repositories like:
• Official Anthropic skills: https://github.com/anthropics/skills
• Matt Pocock’s skills (15k+ stars): https://github.com/mattpocock/skills
• Community marketplace with 66k+ skills: https://skillsmp.com

What stands out is the structure. There are planning skills like Grill Me and Write a PRD that force clarity before you write code. Development skills like TDD, Systematic Debugging, and Code Review that impose discipline. Even business tools for SEO, lead research, Stripe integration, and content creation.

It’s not about more prompting. It’s about building repeatable systems.

Reading through the list feels a bit like discovering you’ve been using a smartphone only to make phone calls. The capability was always there. You just weren’t wired into it yet.

If you work in tech, product, content, or even marketing, this is worth a careful read. Install a few foundational skills. Experiment. Break things safely. Over time, you’ll notice something subtle but powerful: you stop asking Claude for answers, and start designing workflows with it.

And that’s when things get interesting.

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