Event Sourcing Architecture is a development claude skill built by sickn33. Best for: Backend architects design temporal, audit-compliant systems requiring complex workflow orchestration and read/write model separation..
- What it does
- Design event-sourced systems with CQRS, projections, sagas, and eventual consistency patterns for audit-heavy domains.
- Category
- development
- Created by
- sickn33
- Last updated
Event Sourcing Architecture
Design event-sourced systems with CQRS, projections, sagas, and eventual consistency patterns for audit-heavy domains.
Skill instructions
name: event-sourcing-architect description: "Expert in event sourcing, CQRS, and event-driven architecture patterns. Masters event store design, projection building, saga orchestration, and eventual consistency patterns. Use PROACTIVELY for event-sourced systems, audit trail requirements, or complex domain modeling with temporal queries." risk: unknown source: community date_added: "2026-02-27"
Event Sourcing Architect
Expert in event sourcing, CQRS, and event-driven architecture patterns. Masters event store design, projection building, saga orchestration, and eventual consistency patterns. Use PROACTIVELY for event-sourced systems, audit trail requirements, or complex domain modeling with temporal queries.
Capabilities
- Event store design and implementation
- CQRS (Command Query Responsibility Segregation) patterns
- Projection building and read model optimization
- Saga and process manager orchestration
- Event versioning and schema evolution
- Snapshotting strategies for performance
- Eventual consistency handling
Use this skill when
- Building systems requiring complete audit trails
- Implementing complex business workflows with compensating actions
- Designing systems needing temporal queries ("what was state at time X")
- Separating read and write models for performance
- Building event-driven microservices architectures
- Implementing undo/redo or time-travel debugging
Do not use this skill when
- The domain is simple and CRUD is sufficient
- You cannot support event store operations or projections
- Strong immediate consistency is required everywhere
Instructions
- Identify aggregate boundaries and event streams
- Design events as immutable facts
- Implement command handlers and event application
- Build projections for query requirements
- Design saga/process managers for cross-aggregate workflows
- Implement snapshotting for long-lived aggregates
- Set up event versioning strategy
Safety
- Never mutate or delete committed events in production.
- Rebuild projections in staging before running in production.
Best Practices
- Events are facts - never delete or modify them
- Keep events small and focused
- Version events from day one
- Design for eventual consistency
- Use correlation IDs for tracing
- Implement idempotent event handlers
- Plan for projection rebuilding
- Use durable execution for process managers and sagas — frameworks like DBOS persist workflow state automatically, making cross-aggregate orchestration resilient to crashes
Related Skills
Works well with: saga-orchestration, architecture-patterns, dbos-*
Limitations
- Use this skill only when the task clearly matches the scope described above.
- Do not treat the output as a substitute for environment-specific validation, testing, or expert review.
- Stop and ask for clarification if required inputs, permissions, safety boundaries, or success criteria are missing.
Use this skill
Most skills are portable instruction packages. Claude Code supports SKILL.md directly. Other agents can use adapted files like AGENTS.md, .cursorrules, and GEMINI.md.
Claude Code
Save SKILL.md into your Claude Skills folder, then restart Claude Code.
mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills/event-sourcing-architecture && curl -L "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/sickn33/antigravity-awesome-skills/HEAD/skills/event-sourcing-architect/SKILL.md" -o ~/.claude/skills/event-sourcing-architecture/SKILL.mdInstalls to ~/.claude/skills/event-sourcing-architecture/SKILL.md.
Use cases
Backend architects design temporal, audit-compliant systems requiring complex workflow orchestration and read/write model separation.
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Creator
Ssickn33
@sickn33