Design Agent by Lokuma
The designer for your AI agents (Openclaw, CC, Codex)
713 followers
The designer for your AI agents (Openclaw, CC, Codex)
713 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.











Lessie AI
Love this positioning — generation isn’t design.
Adding a design intelligence layer on top of AI agents makes a lot of sense, especially for turning raw outputs into usable, polished pages.
If Lokuma can reliably handle layout, typography, and visual balance, this could be a big unlock for anyone building with AI. Excited to see where this goes.
Really like this direction. The insight that AI can generate but not design is sharp, and it gets more relevant as more builders move into agent driven workflows. You're not really targeting designers here. You're targeting founders and engineers who want to ship faster without things looking like they were assembled by a script. That's a clear positioning angle, and it works.
One thing I kept thinking about: the gap between works and feels designed is the actual hook, and it could hit harder if that contrast showed up earlier and more visually. A side by side, raw agent output versus Lokuma enhanced would make the value obvious before anyone has to read a word.
Also genuinely curious: as agents become the primary user, do you see the messaging shifting away from humans entirely, or does there still need to be a layer where founders feel the value first before they trust it to run?
I work with a lot of SaaS teams on this kind of positioning, especially around launches, so I find the messaging questions here particularly interesting. Would love to see how this evolves.