Thai Niti started from a simple observation: most people study law by rereading the text, making flashcards, or writing memory cards by hand. It works, but it is repetitive, stressful, and not very mobile.
I wanted to make that process more accessible, more engaging, and easier to carry anywhere. As a gamer, I approached legal study as a card-based recall system rather than a traditional reading exercise.
Thai Niti turns Thai legal text into an active recall experience. Instead of passively rereading provisions, users interact with them through structured prompts and simple game mechanics. The goal is not to make law trivial, but to make the process more engaging and less stressful, especially since law school and bar preparation are already demanding.
The current beta focuses on core legal texts and is designed for law students and exam candidates. But the longer-term goal is broader: to make legal knowledge more accessible to a general audience as well. Law should not feel locked behind textbooks.
We plan to expand into more subjects across law school and bar exams, and also build a free research chat experience powered by RAG, including English access for international users interested in Thai law.
Still early, but the direction is clear: make legal learning more accessible, more interactive, and less intimidating.