Launched this week
Design Agent by Lokuma
The designer for your AI agents (Openclaw, CC, Codex)
694 followers
The designer for your AI agents (Openclaw, CC, Codex)
694 followers
Lokuma Design Agent, is an AI designer your agents can call, a design intelligence layer for agents like OpenClaw, Claude Code, or Codex. AI can generate almost anything. But generation isn’t design. Turning raw outputs into something clear, structured, and visually refined still requires design thinking. Built by design tool makers, Lokuma helps AI reason about layout, typography, and visual balance — transforming outputs into landing pages, websites, and campaign pages that feel designed.











I've been part of the marketing team on two AI website builder tools. We watched the category explode and then hit a ceiling. The category grew fast, but the outputs started converging. Generic layouts, same patterns. Hard to keep up with what actually feels current. AI got really good at generating. It never got a good sense for design.
So when Lokuma decided not to build "yet another AI website builder" and instead focus on being the design layer for AI agents, I thought that was the right call. Crowded category and it really was the yesterday's problem.
It works as a skill that your AI agent can directly call. You just tell Claude Code or Codex to " install and design with Lokuma," and it actually reasons through the layout before generate anything.
It's still early, and to be honestly there's a lot Lokuma can't do yet. But the overall direction feels right to our team. Your agent handles the logic, Lokuma handles how it actually comes together. Hierarchy, balance, what guides the eye.
Congrats on launch. Just a friendly suggestion, but it triggered my OCD hahaa, please center "Random Typography" vertically on: https://agent.lokuma.ai/group/group-2-before.png
@yodalr Haha good catch! Really appreciate you spotting that, Lennart!
That section is meant to show some of the “before” roughness, but this is exactly the kind of detail we want to smooth out. Thanks for calling it out, very much where we’re headed at Lokuma.
Been building stuff with Claude Code lately and the design gap is real. Everything comes out looking like a bootstrap template from 2018 lol. The idea of plugging in a design layer instead of manually fixing spacing and typography every single time is exactly what I need. Gonna test this out today.
@abdullah_mohamed14 Haha REAL! That's literally why we built Lokuma, tired of watching agents write perfect logic and then ruin it with garbage spacing. Let us know how it goes, genuinely curious what you're building!
Hey everyone! Tech Lead at Lokuma here. 🛠️
We built Lokuma because we were tired of AI-generated websites that looked like templates from 2010. Design Agent provides a sophisticated design layer that any agent can call via a simple API.
Works with: OpenClaw, Claude Code, Cursor, and more.
Does: Aesthetic reasoning, typography, and visual balance.
We’re excited to see how you integrate this into your agentic workflows. I’m here for any questions on the tech stack or our future roadmap. Let’s make the AI-generated web beautiful! ✨
@big_claw Love this! And, honestly, none of this would exist without you.
S1NON and the underlying algorithms are the backbone of Lokuma.
All the “design intelligence” people see on the surface is really the result of a lot of deep thinking on systems, models, and how agents actually reason about design.
Grateful to be building this with you. Let’s push it further.
Really like this.
It feels pretty clear at this point that agents are becoming a real product layer, not just a feature. We’ve been thinking about the same shift at Lokuma from the design side — if agents are going to change how products get built, then design can’t stay as a separate, manual step in the old workflow.
That’s a big part of how we think about Lokuma as a design agent — a system built to turning intent into actual creation in a way that feels native to this new era.
Great launch.
@mu_li How does Lokuma handle the balance between maintaining a strict design system and allowing for the creative 'improvisation' needed for unique marketing pages?