Loom v0.7.4 is out for macOS, Linux and Windows

Use cases

One design system, every screen.

Polish sweeps die because nobody wants to touch forty screens. Divide them among six real Claude Code sessions, give every session the same rules, and review the whole result in one sitting.

The sweep

Divide, sweep, verify.

Divide

The Conductor splits your screens into clusters and assigns one per session, so the dashboard and the settings pages get polished at the same time, not over three sprints.

Sweep

Every session applies the same brief: replace ad-hoc values with design tokens, normalize spacing and typography, and fill in hover, focus, empty, and loading states.

Verify

Work is re-checked before it counts as done, and the auto-detected web preview opens your dev server inline so you can eyeball each screen without leaving Loom.

One brief

Consistency comes from a single brief.

Six engineers drift. Six sessions reading the same mission do not have to. The Conductor dispatches the same rules to every terminal and the live activity strips show which screen each session is working. If one interprets a rule loosely, type into its terminal, every pane is a real Claude Code TUI, and redirect it on the spot.

goal bar
# typed once into the goal bar
$ Sweep every screen to the design system: tokens
  for color and spacing, consistent focus rings,
  and proper hover, empty, and loading states.
  Do not change layout or copy.

Questions

Common questions.

How do I see the changes?

The web preview auto-detects your dev server and renders it inline, so you can click through every swept screen as the fleet finishes it. The source control panel shows each diff against a full git graph. See reviewing fleet work.

Will sessions conflict on shared components?

The mission DAG sequences shared-component work ahead of the screens that consume it, and each session owns its own cluster. The watchdog nudges drifting sessions, relaunches any CLI that exits, and re-sends the task after recovery.

What about building new pages instead of polishing old ones?

That is the Design tab, a website builder that designs before it builds: theme first, then a page plan, then the fleet builds it.

Hand it the work.
Walk away.

macOS, Linux, and Windows. Around 13 MB. Free and open source.