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10 Lessons Learned from AI Coding Agent Burnout

by Lisa Park - Tech Editor

If you’ve ever used a 3D printer, you may ⁢recall teh wondrous feeling when you first printed something ​you could have ‍never sculpted⁢ or built yourself. Download a⁣ model file, load some ⁣plastic filament, push a button, and almost like‌ magic, a three-dimensional object appears. But the result⁣ isn’t polished ‌and ready for mass production, and creating⁤ a novel‌ shape requires more skills than ‌just pushing a button. Interestingly, ⁤today’s AI coding ⁢agents feel much the same way.

Since ⁤November, I​ have used Claude Code and Claude Opus 4.5 through a personal Claude ⁣Max account to extensively experiment with AI-assisted software advancement (I have also ‍used OpenAI’s Codex in a similar way,though not as frequently). Fifty projects later, I’ll be frank: I have not had this much fun with a computer since‍ I learned ⁢BASIC on my Apple II Plus when ⁢I was 9 years old.‌ this​ opinion comes not as an‍ endorsement but as personal experience: I ⁤voluntarily undertook this project, and‌ I paid out of pocket for‍ both OpenAI and Anthropic’s premium AI plans.

throughout my life, I have​ dabbled in programming as a utilitarian coder, writing small tools or scripts when ⁢needed. In my web development​ career, I wrote some small tools⁢ from scratch, but I primarily modified other ⁢people’s code⁢ for my needs. As 1990, I’ve programmed ⁤in BASIC, C, Visual Basic, PHP, ASP, Perl, Python, Ruby, ​MUSHcode, and some others. I am⁢ not an expert in any of these languages-I learned just enough to get the job done. I have‌ developed my own hobby games over ⁤the years using BASIC, Torque Game Engine, and Godot, so I have some idea of what makes a good architecture ‍for a modular program that can be expanded over​ time.

⁣ ⁤ ‌ ⁤ In December, I used Claude Code to create a multiplayer online clone of Katamari Damacy called “Christmas Roll-Up.” ‌
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In December, I used Claude Code to‌ create a multiplayer online clone of katamari Damacy called “Christmas Roll-Up.”


⁤ ‌ ‍ Credit:

⁢ ‍ ​ ‌


Benj Edwards

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Claude Code, Codex, and⁢ Google’s ⁣ Gemini CLI, ‍can seemingly perform‌ software miracles on a ⁣small scale. They can​ spit out flashy prototypes of simple applications, user interfaces,​ and even ⁤games, but⁢ only as long as they borrow patterns from their training data. Much like a ‌3D printer, doing production-level work takes ⁤far ⁢more effort. Creating ⁣durable⁢ production code, managing a complex project, or crafting something⁣ truly novel still requires⁢ experience, ⁤patience, and‍ skill beyond what today’s AI agents can provide on their own.

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