No. It's better than one. Cheaper, faster, and — statistically — about the same odds of winning or losing. Just minus the hassle, the hourly rate, and the mahogany. LuckLaw AI is technology for negotiated resolution and document workflows, not a court, judge, law firm, or substitute for independent legal advice. Some cases are frankly not worth a lawyer's time, nor yours. We're here to help you get it over with.
No. The AI reads the documents, organizes the facts, explains the variables, and records consent. You and the other side define the possible outcomes. Luck picks between them.
No, and that's the whole point. Every variable, every outcome, and every probability is on the table before anyone signs. The draw is verifiable after the fact. Cheating would require more effort than just paying the bill.
By design, yes — both parties knowingly consent in writing to be bound by the defined resolution before the roll. In the real world, binding effect and enforceability depend on jurisdiction and the specific agreement. This site is a marketing prototype, not a live legal service, so don't stake your mortgage on it yet.
The boring but important part. Documents get uploaded and structured, the issues get named, both sides define and approve the possible outcomes, and each party's informed consent is recorded. Nothing is decided until the rules are signed. No surprise dice.
No. Once both sides sign, it's legally binding — no bailing. It's no different from court in that respect. We've just spared you the hassle and the cost of getting there.
Resolution agreements, settlement and release documents, payment schedules, amendments, assignments, transfer agreements — populated with the selected outcome. All the paperwork your lawyer would charge you 0.4 hours to open in Word.
Low-value, high-friction civil disputes where litigation costs more than the fight: unpaid invoices, deposits, freelance and creator disputes, small contracts, informal loans, digital assets, and similar. Not for criminal matters, custody, or anything involving serious harm. Use a real lawyer for real crimes.
Launching first in the United States and Canada with jurisdiction-specific templates, disclosures, and consent flows. Asia and other jurisdictions to follow. Availability and legal effect may vary — the law, unlike the dice, is not the same everywhere.
No. An invited respondent may review, counter, accept, sign, and participate in a resolution without purchasing a subscription. A respondent only needs one to initiate their own separate matter.
Only after both parties accept identical terms and choose to proceed to agreement, signature, resolution, and closing. No agreement, no closing fee.
The subscription supports access to the AI negotiation and document platform. The closing fee covers the agreement, signature, resolution event, audit record, and final settlement workflow.
No. One Roll and Best of Three are included in the same closing fee.
No. The closing fee is calculated and locked before the resolution event. LuckLaw AI earns the same fee whichever way the dice fall.
Yes. The closing fee may be split equally, paid by either party, or allocated on a custom split by agreement. It's part of the negotiated resolution.
Still curious? Start a resolution and see how it works in practice.
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