Relativity announced today that aiR for Case Strategy has reached general availability, bringing the company’s generative AI case intelligence solution to the masses. For those keeping score at home, this is the tool we flagged back in October as an announcement that would hit hardest when it finally reached the general public. Because while people try to bolt AI onto every legal task out there, this tool takes aim at an area of legal work that unuestionably buckles under modern reality — understanding the damn case.
Modern complex litigation generates an avalanche of data that no human can realistically process. Emails, text chains, Slacks, phone recordings, Outlook Calendars, TikToks, OnlyFans, or whatever else clients use to communicate these days, add up to create what Relativity’s blog diplomatically calls “legal data overload.” The straightforward pitch of aiR for Case Strategy is to use AI to extract key facts from this evidence, organize it into human-digestible timelines, summaries, and draft work product, and get the team working on the case faster. No one wants to discover a new key player two weeks into review — AI is going to flag these wrinkles out of the gate.
According to Relativity, more than 50 customers participated in the limited general availability program, extracting approximately 600,000 facts through the system. These early adopters pulled facts together up to 70 percent faster and freed up thousands of hours of attorney time. One Relativity customer, PageOne Legal, reported using the tool to summarize 32 deposition transcripts running 200 to 300-plus pages, extracting and organizing key information in a fraction of the time humans traditionally take.
“aiR for Case Strategy exceeded expectations by proving not just that it worked, but that it was repeatable, defensible, and intuitive,” said Andrew Milauskas, Chief Operating Officer of PageOne Legal. “We went from spending hours per transcript to extracting key facts within minutes.”
A lot of the problem with AI in legal is an unspoken — and perhaps even unconscious — development philosophy that the problem with the law is that lawyers exist in the first place. Products that try to ramrod the legal workflow and hand lawyers “finished” product so they can be “in-the-loop” just long enough to slap a signature on it and fire it off. And the defenders of that approach will swear they don’t mean to prevent lawyers from doing a detailed overhaul of the work product, but when the time for slow reflection is compressed and the product looks finished, the entire editing process changes.
Meanwhile, the actual problem in law is that the work is hard, messy, and becoming more unruly with every extra terabyte of eDiscovery. Relativity seems to get that this is where lawyers want AI — crunching information, not trying its hand at the unauthorized practice of law.
The product is explicitly designed to function in tandem with human judgment, not replace it. aiR for Case Strategy elevates information, then humans decide what to do with it. That may sound obvious, but in a legal tech market drunk on replacement fantasies, it’s borderline radical.
Big ticket litigation is not “hard” because lawyers are too dumb to do the work. It’s hard because the volume of material is inhuman. The amount of digital documentation in the world would reach the moon 23 times… if put on Blu-Rays. Forget what it would look like if we printed it all out. Strategy suffers not because lawyers lack insight, but because insight gets buried under sheer informational gravity. Frankly, AI still has limitations when it comes to seeing the whole discovery picture, but it’s massively far ahead of throwing a bunch of contract attorneys on it and hoping it’s consistent enough to trickle up.
“aiR for Case Strategy dramatically reduces the manual work of extracting facts and building useful timelines in Relativity,” said Martha Louks, Managing Director, Discovery Technology Services at McDermott Will & Emery. “It offers a novel way to eliminate tedious work and allow attorneys to focus on case analysis and strategy.”
The solution is currently available across multiple jurisdictions including the U.S., U.K., Australia, Canada, Germany, and more, with a projected launch in RelativityOne Government in H1 2026.
This follows Relativity’s pattern of cautious product rollouts, holding tools in limited availability until they’re confident the products are ready for primetime. It doesn’t generate the breathless headlines promising that AI will make lawyers obsolete by next Tuesday. But it’s the kind of practical, “get shit done” approach that actually helps legal teams.
Joe Patrice is a senior editor at Above the Law and co-host of Thinking Like A Lawyer. Feel free to email any tips, questions, or comments. Follow him on Twitter or Bluesky if you’re interested in law, politics, and a healthy dose of college sports news. Joe also serves as a Managing Director at RPN Executive Search.
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