Every new project I start now gets the same setup: a .github/ folder that turns VS Code into a disciplined co-pilot rather than an eager yes-man. Here's what's in it. **@check** — a pre-ship agent. Before every push, I type @check and it reads all recently changed files, hunts for bugs, runs lint, runs a build, and commits any fixes. It never pushes. I review the diff, then push myself. That one habit has caught at least three dumb mistakes that would have gone to production. **/init** — new project setup. I fill in two files (context.md and brand.md) with the product facts and brand rules, then run /init. Copilot reads both and fills in the always-on instructions file that lives in every session. Takes 5 minutes instead of 20. **/seo** — pre-launch checklist. Generates sitemap.ts, robots.ts, manifest.ts, and JSON-LD structured data automatically. Audits for missing OG images and character counts. Then walks me through Google Search Console and Bing registration step by step. **src/config/site.ts** — single source of truth for the site name, URL, description, and brand colors. Change it once and the manifest, JSON-LD, sitemap, and metadata all update on the next build. No sync needed. The whole thing is in a public repo at github.com/modryn-studio/boilerplate. Copy the .github/ folder into any Next.js project and it works. Built for one-person studios that ship fast and can't afford to forget things.
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