Leela facilitators
Run private or group Leela sessions and want to move the process online without losing structure.
A focused online workspace for facilitators, coaches, and psychologists who run deep board-based sessions and want less technical coordination around the process.
A transformational game online is not just a video call, a PDF board, and a dice app. The facilitator needs to hold the participant's request, the group rhythm, the board movement, the entry flow, and the closing reflection.
LeelaRoom is built first as a platform for Leela facilitators, but its product logic speaks to a wider need: an online session environment where the board, participants, movement, and facilitator attention stay together.
This page is for practitioners who use games as a guided method for reflection, not as casual entertainment.
Run private or group Leela sessions and want to move the process online without losing structure.
Facilitate transformational, psychological, coaching, or reflective games and need a more stable digital workflow.
Use game-based formats to work with goals, choices, resources, blocks, and client reflection.
Bring structured game practices into careful work where technology should not interrupt the relationship.
In a manual setup, the facilitator manages the video call, the board, player pieces, dice, notes, turn order, and participant questions across separate tools. In a private session this may be manageable. In a group, the load grows quickly.
The issue is not only convenience. When the facilitator keeps switching tabs and explaining logistics, attention leaves the process. The session becomes less coherent, and the facilitator starts coordinating instead of facilitating.
Participants should be able to join the game space without installing software or reading long instructions.
The board should be an active part of the process, not a static image inside a screen share.
Dice, player positions, and session movement should stay in one place so the structure does not fragment.
The platform should free attention for questions, reflection, interpretation, and clean session closure.
Participants receive a room link and enter the game workspace directly.
Manual setup: The facilitator explains where the link is, where the board is, and what participants should open next to Zoom.
The interactive board, dice, and participant positions live inside one environment.
Manual setup: Pieces are moved manually, often through screen sharing or a separate file.
The facilitator sees the process more clearly and can hold the group rhythm with less effort.
Manual setup: More participants means more difficulty with turn order, visibility, and pace.
The technical layer becomes quieter, so the facilitator can stay with the real process.
Manual setup: Technical interruptions fragment attention and push meaning into the background.
LeelaRoom is not a universal builder for every board game. The primary product focus is hosting the Leela game online: interactive board, game room, participants, dice, and facilitator tools.
Still, if your transformational practice is built around a board, sequential movement, symbolic positions, and guided reflection, LeelaRoom shows what a professional online tool for that kind of work should feel like.
Open LeelaRoom, explore the interactive board, and see how much calmer facilitation becomes when the technical layer is gathered in one place.
No. LeelaRoom is built primarily for hosting Leela online. But the platform is useful as a model for practitioners looking for a board, room, and facilitator workflow in one online space.
Yes, especially if the practice is Leela or a similar board-based process. It reduces manual movement, separate dice tools, repeated explanations, and scattered session logistics.
Zoom is useful for live contact, but it does not manage game mechanics. A PDF board and manual pieces add coordination work. LeelaRoom keeps the board, players, dice, and movement together.
Yes, when they use Leela or a structured transformational game as part of reflective work. The interface does not replace the professional; it reduces the technical noise around the session.