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Disputron vs SOLZIGI

Disputron and SOLZIGI are both lifestyle tracked by AIDiveForge. Below is a side-by-side comparison of pricing, capabilities, platforms, and ownership — sourced from each tool's live website and verified before publishing.

Disputron

Disputron

The workflow is three steps: file your dispute with a description of the grievance, watch AI-generated attorneys argue both sides in real time, then receive a verdict you can share. The vendor describes five attorney archetypes — ranging from a theatrical showman to a citation-heavy academic — so the argumentation style varies based on who the court assigns. The 'Hall of Records' lets anyone browse past verdicts publicly, which is the actual product: shareable, absurdist legal comedy. This is not a mediation tool. There is no escalation path, no real legal weight, and no mechanism for resolving anything that actually matters.

SOLZIGI

SOLZIGI

Saju delivers Korean Four Pillars (사주) birth chart readings through an AI consultation layer, covering personal destiny, relationship compatibility, career direction, and timing for major decisions. The 24/7 availability removes the scheduling friction that makes sensitive questions feel expensive or awkward. Where it breaks: the tool is a closed, hosted-only service with no API, no self-hosted option, and no way to pipe outputs into your own workflow. Deeper analysis sits behind a paid subscription. Teams or developers wanting to embed astrology-derived logic into a product will hit a wall immediately — this is a consumer consultation tool, not a platform.

AttributeDisputronSOLZIGI
PricingFreePaid
PriceFrom $7.99/mo
Free trialNoNo
Open sourceNoNo
Has APINoNo
Self-hosted optionNoNo
PlatformsWebWeb, Mobile
Pros
  • Five distinct AI attorney archetypes generate different argumentation styles, so the same grievance can produce wildly different courtroom theater — which means repeat filing for the same grudge stays entertaining rather than repetitive.
  • Verdicts are public and browsable in the Hall of Records, so the shareable punchline is built into the product rather than requiring you to screenshot and crop.
  • Interactive trial mechanics — whispering strategy, showing emotion, bribing the judge — give you something to do during the proceeding, which means the experience is participatory rather than a passive text dump.
  • No account required to browse verdicts, so the social sharing loop works without pulling your audience through a signup wall.
  • 24/7 on-demand availability with no appointment required, so you can consult on sensitive timing decisions — a wedding date, a business launch — without coordinating schedules or paying per-session fees.
  • Multiple expert perspectives on the same birth chart are available within the product, so you get interpretive range without booking separate practitioners who may contradict each other in ways that are hard to reconcile.
  • AI-consistent methodology across sessions, which means your reading on the same birth data returns the same analytical framework whether you ask once or return six months later — live readers do not offer that.
  • Designed for users with zero prior knowledge of Korean astrology, so the onboarding barrier that stops most Western users from engaging with Four Pillars systems is removed from the start.
  • Judgment-free consultation channel, so questions about relationship compatibility or life decisions that feel awkward to ask a human practitioner can be explored without social friction or concern about the reader's reaction.
Cons
  • Every verdict is explicitly fictional by vendor design, which means the moment either party in a real dispute wants documentation, a neutral record, or any outcome with weight, this tool has nothing to offer — teams with actual conflict resolution needs switch to mediation platforms or HR tooling immediately.
  • There is no API and no self-hosted option, so developers who find the AI argumentation format interesting and want to build on it or integrate it elsewhere hit a dead end — the only path forward is a different tool built on an accessible model.
  • The tool runs on what the vendor calls 'tokens and goodwill,' with no disclosed infrastructure commitment — meaning uptime and longevity carry no guarantees a team or community could depend on for ongoing entertainment programming.
  • No API and no self-hosted option means any team wanting to embed astrology-derived guidance into a product or internal tool cannot use Saju as a backend — they reach that wall on day one of scoping and switch to building against a general-purpose LLM with custom prompting instead.
  • Deeper analysis is locked behind a paid subscription, so the free tier functions as a preview; users who hit meaningful questions about multi-person compatibility or detailed timing guidance will find the free reading insufficient before they have evaluated whether the paid analysis quality justifies the cost.
  • The tool is a closed consumer product with no data export or audit trail described, which means users who want to cross-reference readings, track guidance over time, or share outputs in a structured format with a partner or advisor have no mechanism to do so — they are working from memory or screenshots.
Bottom line

Disputron is free while SOLZIGI is paid. Choose based on which difference matters most for your workflow.

Comparison data is sourced and verified by the AIDiveForge data pipeline. AIDiveForge is editorially independent.