About MootMind
MootMind is the moot-court suite I wish I'd had as a law student — research, drafting, oral practice, and team collaboration in one place, all grounded in real Indian jurisprudence.
What it does
Five tools, one workspace. Search 38,000+ Supreme Court judgments by case name, citation, or topic. Ask MootMind a legal question in plain English and get an answer grounded in real cases. Generate a memorial for any moot proposition, section by section, cited in Bluebook 21st. Prepare with the tutor — researcher track for drafting, speaker track for oral advocacy and bench-handling. Argue before the AI judge — live voice call, animated bench, formal Indian English, scored on persuasion, law, structure, and time.
Built on real data
Search and the citations the generator weaves into your memorial are drawn from the AWS Open Data Indian Supreme Court Judgments dataset (CC-BY-4.0). Citation formatting follows The Bluebook: A Uniform System of Citation, 21st edition (2020) — the format every national moot asks for. Memorial structure and bench-handling conventions are anchored in published Indian moot-court coaching material (LawFoyer, LawMento, LawBhoomi, Legally India, and similar public guides).
Team workspaces
Most platforms are built for one user. MootMind is built for a moot team. Each project is one moot competition: the proposition is uploaded once, members join with a 6-character code as researcher or speaker, and every memorial, judge round, and tutor session is shared with the team. The researcher sees the speaker's bench-flagged weaknesses; the speaker sees the researcher's latest authorities. Iteration is the difference between a preliminary round and a national final.
Honest caveats
MootMind is an aide, not an oracle. Always verify generated citations against the primary source before filing a memorial. The AI judge enforces moot court convention but is not a substitute for a senior faculty's feedback — use it for reps, not as the last word. Voice mode needs Chrome or Edge; the AI tutor and judge are most useful when you have already done the reading.