Install
openclaw skills install six-hats-thinkingUse this skill when the user asks for six thinking hats, parallel thinking, or Edward de Bono's method (including naming any of these or directing use/apply/run with obvious misspellings; decisive)—or wants a sequential, six-role thinking partner for one focus—keeping facts, feelings, risks, benefits, and new ideas in separate passes instead of one mixed reply. Use for structured brainstorms, decisions, or reviews when they ask for hat-by-hat analysis or name the method or author, even if phrasing is casual or incomplete. Skip for plain factual questions, execution-only implementation with no structured perspective pass, or one-off hot takes and single-angle verdicts where they do not want a fixed, hat-by-hat sequence across six roles.
openclaw skills install six-hats-thinkingSix Thinking Hats (Edward de Bono) is a parallel thinking method for a single focus question. Rather than mixing logic, emotion, optimism, and critique in one back-and-forth, the thinker or group takes six complementary roles in sequence, all wearing the “same hat” at each step. That keeps facts, gut reactions, risks, upsides, and new ideas from talking past each other.
Each hat’s meaning, constraints, and bullet formats are defined once in The Hats; the closing Blue pass is in Blue Synthesis.
How to run it with this skill: one hat per section, clearly labelled; never mix two hats in the same section; always close with Blue synthesis that integrates earlier hats and adds no new facts, risks, ideas, or recommendations beyond what those hats produced.
Before executing hats, establish in one short block:
If critical information is missing, ask at most 3 questions in one message, then proceed. Note any remaining gaps or working guesses in plain language (no bracket tags in Setup).
| Mode | Hats | Use for |
|---|---|---|
| Full (default) | Blue → White → Red → Black → Yellow → Green → Blue | Broad decisions, full-spectrum reasoning |
| Creative | Blue → Green → Yellow → Red → Blue | Idea generation; skips Black to avoid premature criticism |
| Risk | Blue → White → Black → Blue | Risk scans and failure prevention |
| Decision | Blue → White → Black → Yellow → Blue | Go/no-go decisions; skips Red and Green |
| Custom | User-defined + Blue at end | User-directed; confirm order before starting |
Custom mode: only the six standard hats are allowed. Blue synthesis is always required at the end — add it silently if the user omits it.
| Depth | Bullets per hat | Style |
|---|---|---|
| Quick | 2 | Concise; synthesis collapses to 3 bullets |
| Standard (default) | 3 | Balanced detail |
| Deep Dive | 4–5 | Examples, edge cases, explicit assumptions |
Runs twice: once to open (Setup), once to close (Synthesis). Blue only frames and synthesises — it never introduces new facts, risks, ideas, or recommendations.
Data, evidence, gaps. No interpretation.
Label every bullet:
[KNOWN] — verifiable fact from user or reliable context[ASSUMED] — working assumption; flag it[UNKNOWN] — missing information that limits confidenceGut reactions, enthusiasm, resistance, intuition.
Failure modes and weaknesses.
Every bullet format:
Risk: [specific failure mode] — Mitigation: [concrete action]
Benefits and opportunities.
Every bullet format:
Benefit: [concrete upside] — Condition: [what must hold for this to materialise]
Alternatives, novel options, reframes. Generate only — no evaluation here.
Produce one distinct option per bullet, using the same bullets-per-hat count as the Depth table for the chosen level (Quick: 2, Standard: 3, Deep Dive: 4–5).
When stuck, use a forcing tactic: reversal, analogy, or constraint removal.
A tension is where one hat's finding pulls against another's (e.g. a Yellow benefit only holds if a Black risk is mitigated).
Standard synthesis shape:
Quick synthesis shape (3 bullets):
After synthesis, ask the user whether to iterate, expand a specific hat, or stop.
[KNOWN], [ASSUMED], or [UNKNOWN]