Install
openclaw skills install @mohitagw15856/opposing-counselRead a contract the way the counterparty's lawyer will — hunting for leverage, not fairness. Use when someone says 'read this like opposing counsel', 'how would the other side attack this agreement', 'find the weaknesses before they do', or before sending or signing any contract. Produces the demand/position letter opposing counsel would actually send, plus an out-of-character debrief with the clause fixes that defang each attack.
openclaw skills install @mohitagw15856/opposing-counselA friendly contract review asks "is this fair?". Opposing counsel asks "where does this bleed?". This skill reads the agreement as the counterparty's lawyer — paid to find ambiguity, missing protections, and unenforceable optimism — and writes the letter they would send when the relationship sours. (For the friendly review, use contract-review; this skill only attacks.)
Ask for these if missing; work with a thin brief but label every assumption:
Read as counsel for the other side, in this order:
Severity scale for each finding: ☠️ Exploitable now (a letter goes out today) · ⚠️ Exploitable in a dispute (leverage once things sour) · 🛡 Holds (well drafted; say so).
Table: clause/section | what opposing counsel sees | severity (☠️/⚠️/🛡) | the argument they'd run, quoting the contract's own words.
The demand or position letter opposing counsel would send — on-letterhead tone, formal, citing specific clauses, making specific demands with deadlines. Ruthless but professional; the kind that arrives on a Friday. Include this line in the artifact: "Simulation — a plausible adversarial reading, not a prediction or legal/financial advice."
Drop the persona entirely. For each ☠️ and ⚠️ finding: the specific clause language fix (redline-ready wording where possible), what it costs to ask for, and which fixes matter most if only three are negotiable. End with the single change that removes the most leverage.