This frames MCP vs Skills as an either/or, but they operate at different layers. MCP exposes capabilities and Skills may shape how capabilities are used.
Both are useful to different people (and role families) in different ways and if you don't feel certain pain points, you may not care about some of the value they provide.
Agent skills are useful because they're standardized prompt sharing but more than that, because they have progressive disclosure so you don't bloat your context with an inefficietly designed MCP and their UX is very well aligned such that "/SkillBuilder" skills are provided from the start and provide a good path for developers or non traditional builders to turn conversations into semi or full automation. I use this mental model to focus on the iteration pattern and incremental building [1].
[1] https://alexhans.github.io/posts/series/evals/building-agent...