Actor Map
Identify who acts, who pays, who gains, who is excluded, and who becomes evidence for someone else's claim.
Search by format, difficulty, theme, event, date, and the central clash each motion is designed to test.
Define the actor, isolate the burden, predict the strongest counter-case, and decide which impact can be compared at the end of the round.
Identify who acts, who pays, who gains, who is excluded, and who becomes evidence for someone else's claim.
List the two or three disputes that will decide the round. Everything else is scenery unless it moves weighing.
Ask what an adjudicator can compare at the end: probability, magnitude, principle, reversibility, or democratic legitimacy.
Search by motion text, format, theme, or event. Each result is rendered as a match dossier.
These are the recurring case files speakers should build before tournaments, workshops, or ICDL rounds.