You can read more about it over at the site, but it allows you to construct and validate arguments in a graphical form, and it has truth/proof propagation so you can see whether a conclusion is currently considered valid or contested. You can create counterpoints where you think the argument breaks down, and strengthen arguments from there. Some upcoming plans are to allow users to validate arguments for themselves, like mark which parts they understand and agree with so they can collapse that part of the graph, and to add more mcp capability so that LLM can help you construct and validate new arguments.