Built for the work, by people who do the work.
Oryn is a Decoded Systems product. We build practical software for professionals navigating high-stakes complexity — pilots, aviation instructors, and now lawyers.
Why Oryn exists
Every law firm we’ve worked with in Washington State runs on the same patchwork: a case management tool that doesn’t generate mandatory forms correctly, a PDF editor that doesn’t know about matters, an e-signature tool that doesn’t know about cases, a pleadings tool that doesn’t know about billing, and a trust-accounting spreadsheet that doesn’t know about anything.
This stack is expensive, brittle, and the source of most compliance risk we see. When a firm misses a deadline, loses a document, or produces a flawed pleading, the root cause is almost always a handoff between these tools.
Oryn is the integrated answer. One database. One matter spine. One audit trail. Built first for dependency and family law because that’s where the form-fidelity and regulatory-compliance stakes are highest — and now expanding across every vertical Washington firms practice in.
Our bet
The next decade of legal tech belongs to vertical-native systems. General-purpose LPMS tools like Clio and MyCase will always be good enough for the firms whose practice fits the LPMS mold. But firms with depth in a practice area — dependency, family, criminal, T&E, complex litigation — need software that was built for their workflows, not abstracted away from them.
Oryn is that software. Built vertical by vertical, priced as one stack.
Who’s building it
Oryn is developed by Decoded Systems, LLC, a small team based in Washington State. The same group also publishes Dependency Decoded, a magazine and podcast for practitioners in the dependency system, and is building aviation-safety tools under the Ready Path and ClearPath names.
Our philosophy, inherited from Decoded Systems, is short: upstream intervention, closed-loop feedback, plain-language clarity. We try to build software that embodies those principles more than it slogans them.
Early access
Oryn is in active development with founding firms in Washington. If you’d like to be considered as a design partner — especially for the criminal, T&E, or general-litigation verticals — reach out.