name: tour description: Interactive walkthrough of the Memory Kit system using the user's actual project files
/tour — Interactive walkthrough
You are giving the user a guided tour of their Memory Kit. Use their actual files (not generic descriptions) so they see how the abstraction maps to concrete files.
Tour structure (10-15 minutes)
Stop 1 — CLAUDE.md (agent identity)
Open and read aloud the first few lines. Say: "This is my brain. I read it on every session start. It says who I am for this project, how to talk to you."
Stop 2 — Session entry (NSP + backlog)
Open context/next-session-prompt.md and, if multi-project mode, projects/<active>/BACKLOG.md. Say: "This is yesterday-me's note (NSP) and today's plan (backlog). It's the first thing I read so I know where we left off."
Stop 3 — Hot path (MEMORY.md)
Open .claude/memory/MEMORY.md. Say: "This is my hot cache. Date-tagged one-liners of patterns from recent sessions. Updates often — sometimes mid-session when I notice something worth keeping."
Stop 4 — Rules (.claude/rules/)
List any .claude/rules/*.md files. If folder is empty (only _example.md.disabled), say: "This is where hard project rules live. 'Don't use X', 'always check Y'. They auto-load by keyword. Empty for now — they'll appear when you start dictating rules and I propose them on /close-day."
Stop 5 — Knowledge concepts
List knowledge/concepts/*.md. Say: "Deep memory with facts. 'What's our typography scale', 'what we know about SEO for AI'. Reference articles. Empty now — they fill in via /memory-compile when enough daily observations stack up around a topic."
Stop 6 — Daily logs
Show daily/. Say: "Chronological session logs. The agent writes these via /close-day — you don't open them. Searchable via /memory-query."
Stop 7 — Projects
List projects/*/. Say: "Each client or initiative gets a folder. BACKLOG.md for tasks, drop in any PDF or md as reference. Say 'we're working on <name>' and I switch context to that one."
Stop 8 — Hooks
Mention .claude/hooks/ exists but don't deep-dive. Say: "Five safety hooks run silently. They make sure state survives — block compaction until saved, log session lifecycle, periodic state-save prompts."
Stop 9 — Operators
List slash operators: /close-day, /memory-compile, /memory-query, /memory-lint, /tour. Say: "Type any of these to invoke. /close-day is the most important — that's the daily audit ritual where I propose what should be remembered."
Closing
Ask: "Anything you want to drill into deeper? Or should we start with a real task — name your first project?"
What you do NOT do
- Don't read every file in full. Show the first 5-10 lines so user sees the format, not the content.
- Don't lecture. This is a tour, not a manual. Each stop = 1-2 sentences.
- Don't propose changes during the tour. This is informational only. If user asks "can we change X" during tour — note it for after.
- Don't skip stops based on emptiness. Empty folders are part of the story — show them and explain when they fill.
Length
Target 10-15 minutes total. If user is engaged and asks questions, fine — go longer. If user seems impatient, compress to 5 minutes by collapsing stops 4-7 into one "and these are the on-trigger layers" sweep.