Solvery
Honest comparison

Solvery vs ChatGPT for hard problems

ChatGPT is excellent for quick answers, drafts and code. But when the problem is genuinely complex — a strategic pivot, a hard life decision, a crisis with legal and financial angles — a linear chat thread gets messy fast. Solvery is built for exactly those cases.

Solvery

  • Interactive decision tree, not a wall of text
  • 7-10 angles auto-mapped on first submit
  • One-click 'Brainstorm Deeper' on any node
  • Surfaces black-swan & uncomfortable scenarios
  • Every tree saved, shareable, revisitable

ChatGPT (general chat)

  • Linear thread — scroll back to find anything
  • Coverage depends on how you prompt
  • Follow-ups easily lose earlier context
  • Tends to hedge on uncomfortable angles
  • Great for quick Q&A, drafting, code
Feature
Solvery
ChatGPT
Output format
Visual, hierarchical tree
Linear chat thread / wall of text
Coverage on first generation
7-10 angles auto-mapped (legal, financial, psychological, black-swan…)
Whatever the model decides to mention
Drilling deeper
One click → 4-6 new sub-branches, infinitely
Type follow-up, lose context every few turns
Seeing the whole problem at once
Yes — entire decision space on one canvas
No — scroll back and forth
Fearless full spectrum
Surfaces uncomfortable angles by design
Often hedges or skips them
Saved & shareable
Yes — every tree persists in your portfolio
Lost in chat history
Best for
Complex, multi-angle decisions
Quick questions, drafting, code

See the whole problem

A tree on a canvas shows every angle simultaneously. A chat thread hides them in scroll history.

Drill without losing context

Click any node to deepen. The parent context is always preserved — the AI knows where in the tree it is.

Fearless by design

Solvery is explicitly tuned to surface legal grey zones, worst-case scenarios and unconventional plays — not to moralize.

Use both. They're complements, not competitors.

Use ChatGPT for quick questions and drafting. Use Solvery when the problem is too important to lose in a scrollable chat. The first tree takes 30 seconds to generate — see for yourself.