5 Secret Codes for Claude Nobody Knows About
A short video claims to reveal five 'secret codes' for Claude AI that supposedly enhance its performance, including commands like 'ultra think' and '/caveman'. These claims are almost certainly false or misleading, as no such native codes or commands exist in Claude.
Summary
The video presents five alleged 'secret codes' for Claude AI, framed as insider knowledge most users don't know about. The first claimed code is 'ultra think,' which the speaker asserts causes Claude to think '10 times harder and smarter.' The second is a '/caveman' command, described as an open-source skill that reduces output token usage by 75%. The third, '/insights,' supposedly lets Claude analyze all past sessions to suggest productivity improvements. The fourth, '/loop,' is claimed to schedule repeating tasks. The fifth, 'BTW,' is said to allow Claude to answer a new prompt without canceling its current work. The video ends with a classic engagement-bait call to action, asking viewers to follow the creator and comment 'mushroom' to receive 'hundreds' more such codes. The content has the hallmarks of misinformation or engagement farming, as these commands are not documented features of Claude and several claims (like cross-session memory analysis) describe capabilities Claude does not natively possess.
Key Insights
- The speaker claims that typing 'ultra think' anywhere in a Claude prompt causes it to think '10 times harder and smarter,' presenting it as a hidden performance multiplier.
- The speaker claims a '/caveman' command is an installable open-source skill that instantly reduces Claude's output token count by 75%.
- The speaker claims '/insights' enables Claude to analyze all of a user's past sessions and proactively suggest productivity improvements, implying persistent cross-session memory.
- The speaker claims typing 'BTW' while Claude is already working allows it to handle a new request without canceling its ongoing task, suggesting a form of parallel processing.
- The video ends with an engagement-bait tactic, asking viewers to comment 'mushroom' to receive hundreds more alleged secret codes, a common social media growth farming technique.
Topics
Full transcript available for MurmurCast members
Sign Up to Access