
The Vibe Ceiling: A Decision Framework for When to Stop Trusting AI-Generated Code
A study by METR published earlier this year found that experienced developers working on their own mature codebases were 19% slower when using AI coding tools. Not faster. Slower. What makes it worse is that those same developers estimated they were working 20% faster. That is a 39-point gap between perception and reality. The developers felt the flow, felt the productivity, watched lines of code appear faster than they could type, and concluded they were crushing it. The clock said otherwise. This is what I am calling the vibe ceiling. Every developer who uses AI tools has one. It is the point where trusting the AI output starts costing more than reviewing it, where the confidence you feel outpaces the quality you are actually shipping. The ceiling is not fixed. It moves depending on what kind of code you are writing, how familiar the codebase is, and how much it costs if something goes silently wrong. The problem is that the vibe makes you feel like the ceiling is higher than it is.
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