ABOUT ROCKSTAR LAW
Train Here. Litigate Anywhere.Graduate Courtroom Ready.
Every new lawyer remembers their first real filing.
The client signs the engagement letter. The supervising partner says go file this. And the new lawyer — top of their class in Business Associations, Trademarks, or Securities Reg — opens the actual government system for the first time and discovers that knowing the law is not the same as knowing the form.
Each one has its own logic, its own terminology, its own quirks, its own buried buttons and inscrutable validation rules.
Each one takes hours to navigate the first time and minutes once you know it.
A first copyright filing can take three hours.
The tenth takes fifteen minutes.
A first Form D between the SEC and EDGAR can take a full day.
The tenth takes forty minutes.
That gap is where billable hours go to die — or where new lawyers build the operational fluency that defines the rest of their careers.
Rockstar Law moves that learning curve into law school.
Rockstar Law is the first platform that lets law students train on faithful replicas of the actual filing systems they will use in practice.
Not slideshow walkthroughs.
Not screenshots in a casebook.
Not abstract descriptions of what the system “does.”
The actual interface — same fields, same validation rules, same workflow, same dated government UX — recreated as a training environment where students can fail, retry, and develop fluency without a client's clock running.
Six modules, expanding
Plus a growing library of practice simulation projects — drafted by working entertainment, IP, and business attorneys based on real matters. Contract drafting, multi-party negotiation, client counseling, issue-spotting across overlapping areas of law. The work that fills a transactional lawyer's actual day.
WHY THE UGLY UX IS THE POINT
A reasonable person looking at our replicas might ask why the interface looks like it was designed in 1998.
Because that's exactly what it looks like in real life.
This is the most important design decision the platform has made. The instinct to “modernize” government UX would feel impressive in a demo. It would also be useless training. A graduate who has practiced on a clean redesign of Sunbiz will be slowed down on every line of the actual Sunbiz on day one of practice. A graduate who has practiced on a faithful replica recognizes the patterns immediately.
Government interfaces are dated, inconvenient, and sometimes genuinely confusing.
They are also where the work happens.
We replicate them as they are
because that's the point of training.
HOW THE PLATFORM WORKS FOR PROFESSORS
Three modes for every module.
The interface never changes — only the support layer does.
Guided
Full hints visible. Definitions, warnings, examples. First exposure.
Assisted
Hints on demand. Students attempt independently and ask for help when needed. Where most learning happens.
Exam
No hints. Real-world conditions. Final assessment.
Professors set the mode per assignment. Same module covers introduction, mid-course practice, and final exam.
AI-assisted grading runs against rubrics built by practicing attorneys, refined through real student submissions. Field-level accuracy on filings. Substantive evaluation on memoranda and contracts. Final grading authority always rests with the professor.
Roster matching handles the inevitable name variations between official enrollment lists and the names students actually go by. Submissions, grades, and feedback flow through the platform.
Free professor accounts. Student subscriptions individually or through institutional licensing. Institutional registration unlocks course catalog integration and FERPA-compliant data handling.
YOUR GRADUATES CAN BE COURTROOM READY DAY ONE
Adopt Rockstar Law and your graduates arrive at their first job already fluent in the systems that consume the first six months of every new lawyer's career.
- They have filed LLCs.
- They have prosecuted trademark applications through publication.
- They have registered copyrights across multiple work types.
- They have drafted Form D filings and submitted them through a faithful EDGAR replica.
- They have responded to cease-and-desist letters.
- They have negotiated entertainment contracts under realistic client constraints.
When their supervising partner says go file this, they know what that actually means.
They know what to ask before they touch the system.
They know how long it should take.
They know what mistakes to avoid because they have already made those mistakes — in the classroom, where the cost of a mistake is a learning moment instead of a malpractice exposure.
Finding work as a lawyer is easy if you can earn your firm money on your first day...that's why RockStar Law was created.
THE BOTTOM LINE
Practice does not make perfect. It makes permanent. “How” you practice is important.
Train Here. Litigate Anywhere.Graduate Courtroom Ready.