About AI Debate Generator
AI Debate Generator builds structured debate arguments — affirmative case, negative case, supporting evidence, and counterpoints — on any topic. Debaters use it to scaffold their first draft of a case file before tournament; teachers use it to seed classroom debates with ready-made positions on both sides.
Who this tool is for
- High school and college debate team members preparing for Lincoln-Douglas or policy debate tournaments
- Teachers running classroom debates who need balanced both-sides material in minutes
- Model UN delegates building position papers for their assigned country
- Public speakers preparing for panel discussions or live Q&A on controversial topics
- Writers researching opposing viewpoints for an op-ed or persuasive essay
Real use cases
- Build a Lincoln-Douglas case on "resolved: countries should prioritize climate action over economic growth"
- Generate both pro and con cases for a high school policy debate on universal basic income
- Prepare counterarguments before a real-life debate so you are not caught flat-footed
- Seed a Socratic seminar in a 10th-grade English class with 6 positions on censorship
- Draft a position paper on AI regulation for a Model UN committee representing Germany
How to use AI Debate Generator
- State the resolution exactly as you will debate it: "Resolved: X should Y" — wording matters in formal debate
- Pick the side you want first: Affirmative, Negative, or "give me both"
- Specify the format: Lincoln-Douglas (values-based), Policy (plan/counterplan), Public Forum, or informal
- List any constraints — preferred warrants, contemporary examples, citation style — in the notes field
- After generating, ask "give me three counterpoints to argument 2 that my opponent will likely make"
Tips for better results
- Verify every statistic the model cites — fabricated sources happen, and a judge will sink your speaker points if caught
- Strong cases have warranted impacts: ask the model to "explain why the impact matters in terms of lives, dollars, or precedent"
- For competitive debate, always read the actual evidence yourself, not just the summary — judges ask cross-ex questions about source quality
Frequently asked questions
Are the citations real?
Sometimes the model hallucinates citations. Treat any cited author or study as a lead to verify in Google Scholar or your library database before you read it as evidence in round.
Can it handle a specific debate format like Public Forum or Parliamentary?
Yes — name the format in your prompt and it will adjust structure (1AC length, contention count, value/criterion for LD, etc.).
Will it write the rebuttal too?
Yes — after the case generates, ask "now write the 2AR rebuttal anticipating that they will go for the disad" and it will continue.
Can I use this for a real political debate I am moderating?
You can use it to prepare balanced questions and anticipate answers, but the model should not write candidate positions — voters deserve the candidates' actual views.