Bar Exam Question Generator

Welcome, traveller, to the gavel-and-quill wing of the codex. Conjure bar exam questions that hum with fact patterns, statute twists, and the weight of a final hurdle cleared. Roll the dice, and let the next pattern finally land.

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Your roll

  1. A will contained a residuary estate that was to be divided among my heirs per stirpes. The testator was survived by two children and four grandchildren. One child died before the testator. Discuss how the distribution should be made.
  2. Defendant was charged with stalking after repeatedly following and contacting someone. Defendant claims he was expressing love and had no intent to cause harm. Discuss the mens rea required for stalking.
  3. A tenant's lease contained an escalator clause for rent increases based on the landlord's operating costs. The landlord increased rent significantly. Discuss the validity of the increase.
  4. Bank A has a perfected security interest in Debtor's inventory. Bank B also claims a security interest in the same inventory and filed its financing statement one day after Bank A. Debtor defaults. Discuss which bank has priority.
  5. A restaurant owner posted a sign on the door stating "Help Wanted: Line Cook, $15/hr, apply within." A job applicant arrived, completed an application, and was told the position had been filled. Discuss whether the restaurant made a valid offer capable of acceptance.
  6. A law firm represented a husband and wife in the purchase of a home. Two years later, the couple seeks a divorce, and the wife wants the firm to represent her. Discuss whether the firm may represent either party.
  7. Plaintiff seeks to introduce a business record showing that the defendant company received a complaint about a defective product three months before the plaintiff was injured. The defendant objects that the document is hearsay. Discuss whether the business records exception applies.
  8. A contract for the sale of unique real property is breached. The buyer seeks specific performance, but the seller argues money damages are sufficient. Discuss whether specific performance is available.
Previous rolls 0

    Why a bar exam question should feel like a fact pattern a justice finally resolves

    A great bar exam question should sound like a fact pattern a careful attorney has just been asked to untangle in ninety seconds. The Storyteller's Codex conjures MBE-style, essay-style, and performance-test prompts rooted in real-world scenarios, with statute-tweaked twists that test application as well as memory.

    The shape of a fact-pattern question

    Bar exam questions lean on the Multistate format, the essay style, and the MPT performance-test cadence, with carefully constructed fact patterns and four clean answer choices. The most memorable questions hide the right answer in the second paragraph and let the wrong answers echo in the third. Scribes match a question to a subject or rule marker, so the result already carries the feel of a test bank a careful bar-prep tutor has been quietly curating for years.

    For bar prep, law-school study groups, and tabletop moot courts

    Roll a bar exam question to seed a chapter set in a moot court, design an MPT task for a tabletop one-shot, name a fact pattern for a fan-translation, populate a study group with believable voices, build a question lineage, spark a fanfic where the candidate finally clears the bar, or stock a law-school brief with questions a 3L would trust.

    Tips from the gavel-tending scribes

    Start with the subject before the title. A real bar question begins in which rule the question is testing. Let the fact pattern build. Bar questions should layer, not flatter. Mix twist with clarity. The best questions twist and a little clarify. Trust the rule marker. A statute, a fact, a rule anchors the question. Keep the stem short. Moot-court calls in clipped welcomes.

    Consider before you roll the dice

    • Which bar exam section is your question from: MBE, MEE, MPT, or your own?
    • Should the question feel Contracts, Torts, Crim, ConLaw, or CivPro, and does the subject match?
    • Will the question be scribbled in a prep book, embroidered on a mug, or whispered in a fanfic?
    • Should the family marker be a statute, a fact, or a rule?
    • Are you writing for bar prep, study group, or tabletop, and does the gavel hold?

    Scribes ask…

    Can I really use these bar exam question names for free?

    Yes. Every name rolled with the Bar Exam Question Generator is free to use in your stories, games, streams or projects — no credit required, though a kind word is always welcome. Just remember the muse is generous, so the occasional name may already belong to someone else; double-check before tattooing it on a logo.

    Is there a limit to how many bar exam question names I can roll?

    Roll until your dice catch fire. The codex holds many hundreds of bar exam question names for this generator alone, and the pool gets shuffled on every visit, so you'll rarely see the same line-up twice.

    Does this work without an internet connection?

    Once a generator's page has loaded, the names are cached in your browser. You can reroll on a train, in a tent, or deep in a dungeon — no signal required.

    Where can I find even more storytelling tools?

    Wander over to The Story Shack's Bar Exam Question Generator for an enriched edition with even more options, illustrations and worldbuilding aids.