This product was not featured by Product Hunt yet. It will not be visible on their landing page and won't be ranked (cannot win product of the day regardless of upvotes).
Forq turns VS Code into an issue management panel for Claude Code. Move an issue to To Do and Forq launches a Claude code instance for it, isolated in its own git worktree, running as an editor tab — then moves it to In Review when it's done. Launch, isolate, and resume as many as you want, all working at once. Also integrates with Linear issue manager, which has a mobile app.
This started as a personal itch. I build a lot, usually solo, and I kept hitting the same two walls:
One — I wanted to work on things in parallel. A coding agent is great, but it's one agent, one branch, one thing at a time. The moment I wanted a second one going, I was juggling worktrees and terminals by hand. There was no clean way to just… run several at once.
Two — I wanted to write myself a bug and move on. I'd notice something mid-flow and my only options were to stop and fix it, or tab out to some issue tracker in the browser and break my focus. Both bad.
So I built Forq to fix both. It turns VS Code into an issue-management panel for your coding agents. Jot down a bug or task right in the editor — no new window, no website. Then move it to To Do, and Forq launches an agent for it, isolated in its own git worktree, running as a tab. Spin up as many as you want, all working at once. One solo dev, running like a team.
It's the tool I wished existed while I was building. If you've felt either of those walls, I'd genuinely love your take — what's your current hack for running things in parallel? And anything you'd want Forq to do next.
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About Forq on Product Hunt
“VS Code agentic issue board”
Forq was submitted on Product Hunt and earned 4 upvotes and 1 comments, placing #105 on the daily leaderboard. Forq turns VS Code into an issue management panel for Claude Code. Move an issue to To Do and Forq launches a Claude code instance for it, isolated in its own git worktree, running as an editor tab — then moves it to In Review when it's done. Launch, isolate, and resume as many as you want, all working at once. Also integrates with Linear issue manager, which has a mobile app.
Forq was featured in Developer Tools (515.4k followers), Artificial Intelligence (473.1k followers) and Vibe coding (561 followers) on Product Hunt. Together, these topics include over 181.6k products, making this a competitive space to launch in.
Who hunted Forq?
Forq was hunted by barak olshe. A “hunter” on Product Hunt is the community member who submits a product to the platform — uploading the images, the link, and tagging the makers behind it. Hunters typically write the first comment explaining why a product is worth attention, and their followers are notified the moment they post. Around 79% of featured launches on Product Hunt are self-hunted by their makers, but a well-known hunter still acts as a signal of quality to the rest of the community. See the full all-time top hunters leaderboard to discover who is shaping the Product Hunt ecosystem.
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Hello, I'm Barak, maker of Forq.
This started as a personal itch. I build a lot, usually solo, and I kept hitting the same two walls:
One — I wanted to work on things in parallel. A coding agent is great, but it's one agent, one branch, one thing at a time. The moment I wanted a second one going, I was juggling worktrees and terminals by hand. There was no clean way to just… run several at once.
Two — I wanted to write myself a bug and move on. I'd notice something mid-flow and my only options were to stop and fix it, or tab out to some issue tracker in the browser and break my focus. Both bad.
So I built Forq to fix both. It turns VS Code into an issue-management panel for your coding agents. Jot down a bug or task right in the editor — no new window, no website. Then move it to To Do, and Forq launches an agent for it, isolated in its own git worktree, running as a tab. Spin up as many as you want, all working at once. One solo dev, running like a team.
It's the tool I wished existed while I was building. If you've felt either of those walls, I'd genuinely love your take — what's your current hack for running
things in parallel? And anything you'd want Forq to do next.
— Barak