brother-skill

Distill the bros in your life — real brothers, internet brothers, group chat legends, and content creators who feel like friends. Captures how they talk, what makes them funny, their catchphrases, their chaos energy. Feed it clips, screenshots, and stories. It learns to talk like them, think like them, and roast you like them. Self-learning. Gets more accurate with every input.

Category

Persona

Install

Hot:0

Download and extract to your skills directory

Copy command and send to OpenClaw for auto-install:

Download and install this skill https://openskills.cc/api/download?slug=realteamprinz-brother-skill&locale=en&source=copy

brother-skill — Capturing the way brothers talk and their personalities

Skill Overview


brother-skill is an AI skill that learns how brothers, friends, or content creators speak—along with their humor and personality traits—by analyzing clips, screenshots, and stories you provide. It can then interact with you in their style.

Use Cases

1. Save a Friend’s Speaking Style


Record real brothers’ or group-chat friends’ catchphrases, humor styles, and speaking habits. When you drift apart or want to reminisce, this skill helps their “voice” keep existing.

2. Imitate Your Favorite Network Creators


Capture the energy and speaking style of YouTubers, streamers, and TikTokers. Whether it’s Jake Paul’s hype mode, MrBeast’s challenge style, or a certain Chinese-area creator’s unique expressions, you can learn and recreate them.

3. Group Chat Role Simulation


Once the styles of multiple friends are learned, you can simulate group chat interaction scenarios. See what happens if you put A and B in the same room, or generate a group chat dialogue about a specific topic.

Core Features

Multi-Dimensional Personality Analysis


Extract a person’s style across 5 dimensions:
  • Voice & Language: catchphrases, vocabulary preferences, speaking pace and intonation, ways of greeting and saying goodbye

  • Comedy Style: types of humor (roasting, self-deprecation, dry jokes), timing of punchlines, taboo topics

  • Energy & Vibe: default energy level, trigger points, role positioning within the group

  • Content Personality: content style, posting rhythm, how they interact with fans (for creators)

  • Relationship With You: how you got to know them, internal jokes, and what you’ve learned from them
  • Self-Learning Architecture


    Uses a “never overwrite—only append” learning principle:
  • Each new input updates the profile rather than replacing it

  • As more data accumulates, confidence rises from Low → Medium → High → Very High

  • Automatically detects contradictory data and asks the user to clarify

  • All interaction logs are saved in interaction-log.jsonl
  • Roleplay Interactions


    You can ask it to “talk to me as [someone]” and the skill will:
  • Use the other person’s real catchphrases and slang

  • Match their humor style (roasters roast; hype types hype)

  • Reference real internal jokes and iconic moments

  • Stay in character (a cold-faced bro won’t suddenly become a hype man)

  • Apply a “sanitized version” for offensive content
  • FAQs

    How much data does bro skill need to start mimicking?


  • 1–5 data points can generate a rough sketch and identify basic traits.

  • After 6–20 data points, it reaches medium confidence and can perform basic imitation.

  • After 21–50 data points, it reaches high confidence and can fairly accurately say how “this person would speak.”

  • After 50+ data points, it enters Very High and can even predict behavior patterns.
  • What kinds of input are supported?


    Almost all formats:
  • Video clips or timestamps

  • Screenshots (tweets, posts, comments, group chats)

  • User-described stories (“One time my friend said…”)

  • Descriptions of behavior patterns (“He’s always like this—when… he’ll…”)

  • Text records, chat logs, and more
  • Can it mimic Chinese content creators?


    Yes. bro skill prioritizes cultural sensitivity: Chinese internet humor relies on meme references, the ability to generate jokes, and dramatized storytelling; American YouTube leans toward shock and reactions; British humor is dry and sharply to the point. The skill matches the creator’s cultural background rather than flattening all styles.