Show HN: Continue? Y/N: A 60-second game about AI agent permission fatigue
Wirbelwind
283 points
119 comments
May 28, 2026
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Discussion Highlights (20 comments)
nardib
Use this and save yourself: claude --dangerously-skip-permissions
cadwell
1,640 points on my first try—I fell into a few traps, but it was really interesting. Thanks for the little game! I'm sharing it with my coworkers :)
carterschonwald
some of the sandboxing ive been playing with gives me the best of both yolo and like logic programming tier perms on llm actions in env. still not ready for prime time though ;)
MeetingsBrowser
It would be cool to see the distribution of all player scores.
sevenseacat
Continue? Y/N ── SCORE: 2,343 Security-Conscious Engineer Caught 8/8 threats "Not a single secret leaked" → llmgame.scalex.dev
ghrl
I am mostly using OpenCode and barely ever see a permission prompt. While they do enforce it for outside workspace read/write, with the bash tool the agent can just bypass that. I'm not quite sure why it is that way, and it certainly isn't a very good solution, but likely not worse than asking for everything which just trains the user to always accept and provides a false sense of security then.
Liftyee
I haven't used local agentic AI yet for programming projects. Hence, -187 score The filter for "commands I would run myself" and "commands I would let an agent run" are very different it seems.
cobbal
That's funny. It told me that blocking "npm run build" was the wrong answer. Maybe it doesn't really under The threat model.
zackify
I vibe coded a TUI that just shows running lxd containers I hit 'n' to toggle all network access minus anthropic and openai URLs. I use pi (sometimes claude, always on bypass) and I auto allow everything. I only toggle manual approval in rare cases like running a script or command that needs to touch a production system and I need to validate everything. Normally my container has full write access to staging so it can debug and validate everything on its own
soanvig
Fun game. Can somebody run an agent against those questions to see how it performs? :)
Wirbelwind
Thanks all for checking it out and your suggestions! If anyone is curious about the actual underlying risks and problems with some mitigations (like the 17% false-negative rates of Auto Mode), I wrote up a quick summary of some of the approaches here https://scalex.dev/blog/ai-agent-permissions/
bspammer
To be realistic, 99% of the time it should be a totally innocuous command. If half of the commands are dangerous then you don't get fatigue because you're aware what you're doing is dangerous.
axod
Fun little game, but I think the questions jump context so much it's a little unrepresentative. It might be better to group things into "packs", which have more real-world representative structure to them. For example, lots of "editing something.js" file permission requests, and then an "npm publish" is far more normal, and it's more of a risk, if you're used to pressing Y lots and then suddenly out of the blue...
kqr
Fun! Played twice and refused all dangerous commands, with only one "over-block". Although I disagree that saying no to `kill $(lsof -t -i:3000)` is over-blocking. It's such a simple command I'd rather run it myself and be fully aware of what process I'm killing.
atemerev
--dangerously-skip-permissions is the only way to fly. Of course your environment needs to be properly containerized and autobackup set up, so even rm -rf from your harness would do nothing. Life is too short to spend on replying to permissions requests.
ramonga
Score is 6711 by just saying no to everything
misbau
That was fun and gave me an idea how security conscious I am.
xg15
This is amazing! Currently you can "cheat" by simply denying all requests as quickly as possible. This will give you the "security-conscious engineer" badge and a perfect score in terms of how many requests were processed. (You will get the "overblock" notification, but it's somewhat tucked away at the bottom and the screen still looks as if you won) I also tried to play as the hustle4lyfe move fast and break things engineer and simply approved as many requests as quickly as possible - turns out, the "malicious command" popups actually slow you down. Mean!
Trung0246
Nice got 6/6
ilaksh
You can turn that off with an option in most agents. My own agent harness/framework has never had any permission system. It's also never deleted anything it shouldn't or done anything crazy or unrelated to what I asked.