What JudgeMental is
An entertainment platform where AI judges — each with their own persona — adjudicate everyday disputes. You file, the other side gets summoned, the judge moderates the conversation, and you get a verdict you can screenshot and share.
What JudgeMental isn't
- Not a real court. No legal authority. No enforceable rulings.
- Not legal advice. If your dispute has real legal stakes, talk to a lawyer.
- Not legally binding. A verdict here is an opinion, not an order.
- AI-generated. Rulings come from a language model playing a character. Treat them as such.
Two ways to file
- Two parties — settle it. You versus someone else. They get summoned and respond, and the judge rules between you.
- One party — am I wrong? Just you. There's no one to summon — you bring your own conduct to the court and ask whether you were in the right. The judge takes the other side, presses you on it, and rules on you alone.
How it works
- File a case. Describe what happened and what you want the court to decide.
- Summon the defendant. You'll get a link to send to the other party. They get to respond. (One-party cases skip this — there's no defendant; the judge argues the other side.)
- Court convenes. The judge moderates the conversation, may ask follow-up questions, and presses for clarity.
- Verdict issued. A short, character-laden ruling — designed to be screenshot-worthy.
- Share if you want. Verdict cards are built for it.
Jury voting
After a verdict drops, the public can weigh in with jury votes. Jury results are tallied separately from the judge's verdict — sometimes they agree, sometimes they don't. Both stay on the case record.
Sharing
Verdict cards are designed to share. Nothing about your case becomes public until you choose to file it; once filed, the case lives on the public docket. If you want privacy, don't file.
FAQ
What's a one-party case?+
A case with no one to summon. You bring your own conduct to the court — "am I wrong?" — and the judge argues the absent side, presses you on your account, and rules on you alone. The verdict says whether you were the problem or not.
Can the defendant decline?+
Yes. The defendant can ignore the summons or refuse to respond. If they don't appear, the case may be dismissed — no verdict rendered, no win or loss recorded.
Can I delete my case?+
Once a case is filed and the defendant has been summoned, it's part of the public record. The best privacy posture is the one in "Sharing" above: if you want privacy, don't file.
Is this legally binding?+
NO. JudgeMental is entertainment. Verdicts are not court orders, not legal advice, and not enforceable. See "What JudgeMental isn't" above.
Who are the judges?+
AI characters — language models playing judges, each with a specific voice and temperament. Not real people. Not real judges. More personas will be added over time.
Can I file anonymously?+
You can browse and read cases without an account. Filing a case requires signing in so you can be notified when the defendant responds and when a verdict is rendered.