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1 de março de 2026
Vibe coding with overeager AI: Lessons learned from treating Google AI Studio like a teammate

Vibe coding with overeager AI: Lessons learned from treating Google AI Studio like a teammate

Most discussions about vibe coding usually position generative AI as a backup singer rather than the frontman: Helpful as a performer to jump-start ideas, sketch early code structures and explore new directions more quickly. Caution is often urged regarding its suitability for production systems where determinism, testability and operational reliability are non-negotiable.  However, my latest project taught me that achieving production-quality work with an AI assistant requires more than just going with the flow. I set out with a clear and ambitious goal: To build an entire production‑ready business application by directing an AI inside a vibe coding environment — without writing a single line of code myself. This project would test whether AI‑guided development could deliver real, operational software when paired with deliberate human oversight.  The application itself explored a new category of MarTech that I call 'promotional marketing intelligence.' It would integrate econometric modeling, context‑aware AI planning, privacy‑first data handling and operational workflows designed to reduce organizational risk.  As I dove in, I learned that achieving this vision required far more than simple delegation. Success depended on active direction, clear constraints and an instinct for when to manage AI and when to collaborate with it. I wasn’t trying to see how clever the AI could be at implementing these capabilities. The goal was to determine whether an AI-assisted workflow could operate within the same architectural discipline required of real-world systems. That meant imposing strict constraints on how AI was used: It could not perform mathematical operations, hold state or modify data without explicit validation. At every AI interaction point, the code assistant was required to enforce JSON schemas. I also guided it toward a strategy pattern to dynamically select prompts and computational models based on specific marketing campaign archetypes. Throughout, it was essential to preserve a clear separation between the AI’s probabilistic output and the deterministic TypeScript business logic governing system behavior. I started the project with a clear plan to approach it as a product owner. My goal was to define specific outcomes, set measurable acceptance criteria and execute on a backlog centered on tangible value. Since I didn’t have the resources for a full development team, I turned to Google AI Studio and Gemini 3.0 Pro, assigning them the roles a human team might normally fill. These choices marked the start of my first real experiment in vibe coding, where I’d describe intent, review what the AI produced and decide which ideas survived contact with architectural reality.   It didn’t take long for that plan to evolve. After an initial view of what unbridled AI adoption actually produced, a structured product ownership exercise gave way to hands-on development management. Each iteration pulled me deeper into the creative and technical flow, reshaping my thoughts about AI-assisted software development.  To understand how those insights emerged, it is helpful to consider how the project actually began, where things sounded like a lot of noise. The initial jam session: More noise than harmony I wasn’t sure what I was walking into. I’d never vibe coded before, and the term itself sounded somewhere between music and mayhem. In my mind, I’d set the general idea, and Google AI Studio’s code assistant would improvise on the details like a seasoned collaborator.   That wasn’t what happened.   Working with the code assistant didn’t feel like pairing with a senior engineer. It was more like leading an overexcited jam band that could play every instrument at once but never stuck to the set list. The result was strange, sometimes brilliant and often chaotic. Out of the initial chaos came a clear lesson about the role of an AI coder.  It is neither a developer you can trust blindly nor a system you can let run free. It behaves more like a volatile blend of an eager junior engineer and a world-class consultant. Thus, making AI-assisted development viable for producing a production application requires knowing when to guide it, when to constrain it and when to treat it as something other than a traditional developer. In the first few days, I treated Google AI Studio like an open mic night. No rules. No plan. Just let’s see what this thing can do.  It moved fast.  Almost too fast. Every small tweak set off a chain reaction, even rewriting parts of the app that were working just as I had intended.  Now and then, the AI’s surprises were brilliant. But more often, they sent me wandering down unproductive rabbit holes. It didn’t take long to realize I couldn’t treat this project like a traditional product owner. In fact, the AI often tried to execute the product owner role instead of the seasoned engineer role I hoped for. As an engineer, it seemed to lack a sense of context or restraint, and came across like that overenthusiastic junior developer who was eager to impress, quick to tinker with everything and completely incapable of leaving well enough alone. Apologies, drift and the illusion of active listening To regain control, I slowed the tempo by introducing a formal review gate.  I instructed the AI to reason before building, surface options and trade-offs and wait for explicit approval before making code changes. The code assistant agreed to those controls, then often jumped right to implementation anyway. Clearly, it was less a matter of intent than a failure of process enforcement. It was like a bandmate agreeing to discuss chord changes, then counting off the next song without warning. Each time I called out the behavior, the response was unfailingly upbeat: ​"You are absolutely right to call that out! My apologies." ​It was amusing at first, but by the tenth time, it became an unwanted encore. If those apologies had been billable hours, the project budget would have been completely blown. Another misplayed note that I ran into was drift. Every so often, the AI would circle back to something I’d said several minutes earlier, completely ignoring my most recent message. It felt like having a teammate who suddenly zones out during a sprint planning meeting

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