• I wanted to try WPVibe as a way to connect my WordPress site to an AI client, but the setup experience immediately raised trust concerns.

    The company markets itself as WPVibe, but the WordPress plugin is listed under Vibe AI. That branding mismatch is confusing, especially for a tool that may be granted access to a live WordPress site. Clear branding matters when users are being asked to connect admin-level systems.

    The onboarding also did not match the instructions. The documentation says that after activation, the plugin should walk you through connecting WPVibe and choosing site permissions. That never happened for me. There were no activation prompts, no clear permission flow, and no obvious setup process. Because of that, the next step of adding the MCP server to an AI client also failed.

    For a tool in this category, the setup needs to be clear, consistent, and confidence-inspiring. Instead, I was left wondering whether I had installed the right plugin, whether the docs were current, and whether the connection process was working as intended.

    That is not acceptable for something that asks for access to a WordPress site. I would not recommend using it until the branding, documentation, and onboarding flow are much clearer.

    [Edited] I’ll give it three stars rather than one, based on their prompt response.

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  • Hi, John here, I build WPVibe. Thanks for taking the time to write up specifics, and I’m sorry the first run went badly.

    On the naming: you’re right that it’s confusing, and I wish it were simpler. WordPress.org doesn’t accept plugin names starting with “WP” (their guidelines treat it as shorthand for the WordPress trademark), so the listing had to go up as “Vibe AI” while the product itself is WPVibe. We can’t change the slug now without breaking existing installs, but I’ll make the dual name more prominent on the listing and in the docs so nobody is left wondering whether they installed the right plugin. That’s fair feedback.

    On onboarding: after activation, the plugin opens a setup screen that walks you through it in three steps: the plugin install (already done at that point), adding the MCP server URL to your AI client (with instructions for Claude, ChatGPT, Cursor, and others), and a copy-paste prompt that asks your AI to connect the site. Your AI then returns a one-click authorization link that opens your own WordPress admin, where WordPress itself shows the approval screen. The access it grants is a standard Application Password you can see and revoke in your profile at any time.

    From your description, that setup screen never appeared for you, and I’d like to figure out why. The most common cause is a redirect or optimization plugin intercepting the post-activation redirect. Either way, the screen is always available under “Vibe AI” in your admin menu, so you’re never locked out of setup.

    If you’re open to giving it another try, email me at support@wpvibe.ai and I’ll walk you through it personally. Either way, thanks for the detailed writeup. This kind of specific feedback is what actually gets things fixed.

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