For Indian debaters
An AI debate partner for the Indian circuit
Most AI debate tools sound like an American podcast. They don't know what an IIDC final looks like, they don't run Asians, they call a PM speech "the opening statement," and they spew US case studies when the motion is about Indian federalism. Debate AI is built differently. The AI plays in Asian Parli, BP, WSDC, MUN, and Indian school formats — properly, with the right roles, the right speech times, the motion areas your tournaments actually run. About 80% of the people who use this product are debating from India. The product knows it.
The formats Indian debaters actually run
Asian Parliamentary
Three-on-three. Seven-minute speeches. Reply speech that re-frames the round. Used at IIDC, UADC, NSDC, IRC, NLU invitationals.
Format guide →
British Parliamentary (BP)
Four teams, eight speakers, fifteen minutes prep. The format at WUDC, EUDC, AIDC, the IIT-Delhi Open, NLSIU Bangalore.
Format guide →
World Schools (WSDC)
The high school international format. Three-on-three, eight-minute substantives, reply speech. Indian school selectors run on this.
Format guide →
MUN
Conversational citations, position-paper style, moderated and unmoderated caucus. Practice opening speeches and resolutions.
Practice MUN →
Public Forum / LD / Policy
Indian schools entering US-format invitationals (TOC qualifiers, online circuit) — get format-accurate practice with proper card structure.
All formats →
Viva and oral exams
For students doing university vivas, board practicals, IIT/NEET interviews, dissertation defenses. AI examiner with Indian-English register.
Practice viva →
Tournaments the motion banks match
NLSIU Bangalore
BP / Asian
CBSE Inter-School
WSDC-adjacent
Frank Anthony
WSDC-adjacent
What "Indian-aware" actually means in the product
- Motion areas. The impromptu motion generator weighs Indian policy (CAA, reservation, electoral bonds, judicial reform, federalism), South Asian IR (Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, China border, SAARC/BIMSTEC), and global political economy — not just US gun control and abortion rights.
- Examples in AI speeches. When the AI runs a substantive, it pulls examples from places its opponent will actually recognize — the 1991 LPG reforms, GST, demonetization, the 2024 election, Bangladesh's RMG sector, Karnataka's reservation rebalance — alongside global cases.
- Role expectations. Asian Parli speeches reach for principles + practical + weighing in the way Indian judges actually score for. BP whips weigh issue-by-issue. WSDC reply is a biased adjudication. The AI follows the format your judge sits with.
- Voice register. Optional Indian-English examiner voice (Dr. Iyer) for viva and oral-exam practice. The persona doesn't put on a fake accent — measured academic cadence, Indian-English vowels, the register of a senior school panel examiner.
- Hindi support. The voice round supports Hindi rounds end-to-end — LLM in Hindi, TTS in Hindi, transcription in Hindi.
Pricing in INR terms
The product is priced in USD but works out at: Free = no card, 10 requests a day. ₹85/month (BYOK $1) if you bring your own Anthropic key for unlimited Claude. ₹420/month (Individual $5) for 250 requests/month across four AI brains plus HD voice. ₹1,250 once (Lifetime $14.99) for the same 250 requests/mo with no recurring charge. Most Indian users on the paid tier go with Individual or Lifetime depending on whether they want to keep paying.
Built by a debater, not a product manager
The product was built by a national APDA champion who debated through high school and college. The format accuracy isn't a checklist item — it's why this exists. If you've ever used an AI tool that called a substantive a "rebuttal" or a POI a "question" or had the AI give a "closing statement" in BP, you know what the gap feels like. This is what it should feel like instead.
Try a round
Pick a motion, pick your seat, run the round. The AI plays the rest of the bench. Asian Parli, BP, WSDC, MUN — whichever format you're prepping for.
Spar with an AI →