A Russian-language tool that adapts AI agents to use idiomatic profanity by leveraging a small core of roots. It provides CLI-like commands and multiple calibration levels, with MIT license and recent activity.
Collecting history — the radar snapshots this repo daily. The trend line appears after 3 days of data (1 so far).
What it is
Russian profanity mode for AI agents, aimed at using a compact linguistic core (four roots) plus prefixes/suffixes to produce idiomatic output. The project is described as faster and more economical in root usage, with emphasis on generating natural-sounding speech rather than literal translations.
How it works
- Core idea: four roots plus affixes to form idiomatic expressions.
- Levels of calibration for agents: ordinary agent, lite, full (default), ultra. Switching level via commands like "/pohuy <level>". Each level affects how the internal object references are handled (via useMemo in examples).
- Activation commands: "(/pohuy)" to enable and commands to disable, e.g., "нормальный режим" to turn off.
- Internal emphasis on code quality: claims about clean commits/docs, and avoidance of security-focused shifters.
Getting started
The README provides installation steps for different toolchains:
- Claude Code plugin path:
"```bash
Claude Code — плагин
claude plugin marketplace add smixs/pohuy && claude plugin install pohuy@pohuy - Skills registry path:
"```bash
npx skills add smixs/pohuy
It also shows how to enable/disable and how to select levels, including a table with level descriptions and guidance on useMemo for reducing re-render churn.
Recent releases
- There are no releases listed in the repository metadata or releases section.
Traction
- Stars: 25 (no 7d or 1d data provided in FACTS, so no ongoing traction metrics beyond the current count are shown).
Caveats
- License: MIT
- Created: 2026-07-17
- Last push: 2026-07-18
- Language: not specified (language field is "-") and repository description is in Russian; README is Russian with some English phrases.
What it is not
- The README contains placeholder sections (e.g., "???” in How it works) and marketing-like phrasing not backed by external references.
