Fair question. No — and we know you've heard this before. The difference is architectural: NeuroLaw is built around five cognitive faculties (pattern recognition, precision, speed stability, endurance, regulation), not a list of topics. You earn XP for what your brain is actually doing, not for grinding flashcards. The LSAT content is the application, not the product.
Not at all. Everything that makes NeuroLaw work for ADHD, autistic, or dyslexic learners — low-friction starts, strengths-first feedback, adaptive pacing, shame-free language — makes it work better for neurotypical learners too. You just might not realize how much you needed it until you try it.
Single Target Lock (deep focus on one question type), Minimal Effort Run (low-stakes five-question sets for hard days), Endurance Trial (full-section test-day realism), and No Stakes Replay (pattern consolidation through spaced revisits). See the Features page for the full breakdown.
Yes — Logical Reasoning, Analytical Reasoning, and Reading Comprehension. The cognitive faculties apply across all three, so you're not learning three separate games.
Pricing & trial
You get full Pro access for seven days. No credit card required up front. At the end, you choose whether to subscribe — we don't auto-charge anyone who didn't enter a payment method.
Basic gives you the full cognitive training game — every mode, every metric, the skill tree, 35 handcrafted practice questions. Pro adds the AI layer: 200+ AI-generated questions, the AI Tutor for personalized explanations, adaptive difficulty, spaced repetition scheduling, and the burnout detection system. If you want the system, Basic works. If you want the system plus it adapts to you, Pro.
Yes, in two clicks, from your settings. No phone call, no retention form, no guilt. You keep access until the end of the period you paid for.
Yes. We quietly run an accessibility grant program for students where cost is a real barrier. Email hello@neurolaw.app with a short note about your situation. No paperwork, no proof of anything. We'll figure it out.
Accessibility & design
Wrong answers are called "Pattern Missed" and come with a specific breakdown of which cognitive faculty the trap was testing. Streaks can't go below zero — there's no "lose streak" concept. End-of-session summaries lead with what you did well, then show growth areas. Small things, over and over. It adds up.
Yes. Focus Mode strips out streaks, badges, animations, and all non-essential UI. Just the question, your response, and the reasoning. Available on every plan.
The system watches patterns in your response time, accuracy drift, and session length. When signs of fatigue appear, it suggests a break before you post scores you'd blame yourself for. You can always override it — but the nudge is there. (Pro and Enterprise only.)
Both fully supported. Accessibility is baked into the design system, not bolted on after. If you hit an issue, tell us — fixing those is priority-zero work.
The bigger picture
Because the skills the LSAT measures aren't LSAT skills — they're general-purpose legal thinking skills. Framing it as cognitive training means the work compounds beyond test day. Your first-year law school reading load will thank you.
A small team led by someone with ADHD who hit a wall with traditional LSAT prep and got curious about why. Read the full story on the About page.