Solve your GeoGuessr round.
Or verify a real photo.
GeoSolver is built for GeoGuessr. Oceanir is built for verification. Drop an image below and you'll get a location either way. What happens after that is where the two tools split.
If you're here from GeoGuessr
GeoSolver (reverseimagelocation.com) is a genuinely good tool for what it does. It reads a game frame and gives you a fast location. If you're grinding ranked, it's a solid shortcut. We're not going to pretend otherwise.
Oceanir can solve game rounds too. The uploader above just proved it. Same visual cues a skilled player reads: road markings, signage script, architecture, vegetation, plates. No GPS, no EXIF. You get coordinates and a confidence score in under 30 seconds.
But Oceanir also does things GeoSolver doesn't. Things that don't matter in a game and matter a lot everywhere else:
Cross-checks the predicted location against Street View using visual keypoints. Multi-pass zoom. The kind of verification you can hand to an editor, a lawyer, or a claims adjuster.
A downloadable forensic bundle with visual citations. Not just a coordinate, a record. Built for real investigations where the answer has to be defensible.
REST API and MCP server. Geolocate images in a pipeline, from your own code, at scale. Game-solver tools are web UIs you use by hand.
Shared workspace, pooled credits, multiple analysts on the same evidence. Built for teams who verify together, not solo players chasing a high score.
When GeoSolver is enough
Not every photo needs a forensic workup. Sometimes you just need an answer. Here's where GeoSolver is the right tool for the job.
Playing GeoGuessr
You're mid-round, the clock is ticking, and you need a fast location read. GeoSolver gives you an answer in seconds. That's exactly what it's built for.
Casual curiosity
Someone sent you a photo and you just want to know roughly where it is. No stakes, no evidence, no report. A single guess is plenty.
Game solving and practice
You're training your own geo skills or testing a bot against game frames. Speed and a single coordinate matter more than a defensible evidence trail.
When Oceanir is better
The difference shows up when the stakes go up. A game answer is disposable. A verification answer has to hold up.
Real investigations
A photo needs to be verified, not just guessed. You need ranked candidates, confidence scores, and the visual cues that drove the answer so you can defend it.
Evidence you can export
Journalism, legal, insurance. The deliverable is a report, not a coordinate. Oceanir's D3 tier produces a forensic bundle with Street View cross-checks and visual citations.
Team workflows
Multiple analysts, shared cases, a workspace where everyone sees the same evidence. Oceanir's Unit plan is built for teams. Game-solver tools are single-user by design.
API automation
You need to geolocate images at scale, in a pipeline, from your own code. Oceanir ships a REST API and MCP server. GeoSolver is a web tool you use by hand.
Journalism, legal, and insurance
When the location of a photo could end up in a story, a courtroom, or a claim file, the bar is higher than a game answer. You need a tool built for verification.
Real example: from game to investigation
A GeoGuessr player we'll call Marco spent his evenings grinding ranked duels. He used GeoSolver for the hard rounds. It worked. He climbed to Master.
Then his day job asked a different question. Marco works in insurance claims. A policyholder submitted a photo alleged to show storm damage at a specific property. The metadata was stripped. The address on the claim didn't match the scenery. His team needed to verify where the photo was actually taken.
GeoSolver could give a coordinate. What it couldn't give was a defensible answer. No ranked alternatives, no confidence breakdown, no Street View cross-check, nothing to put in a claim file. Marco searched for "geolocation AI for verification" and found Oceanir.
He uploaded the photo. Oceanir returned a top guess 40 miles from the claimed address, plus four alternatives with confidence scores. The D3 forensic tier cross-checked the top candidate against Street View and confirmed the match: a similar building, same utility pole style, same road markings. He exported the evidence bundle and attached it to the claim.
Same skill that won GeoGuessr rounds. Different tool. The game taught him to read a scene. Oceanir let him turn that read into something he could defend at work.
Composite example based on how verification users describe finding Oceanir. GeoGuessr players who hit a real-world verification need are one of our most common acquisition paths.
Try your own
Game frame or real photo, it works the same. Drop it in and see what comes back. If you want the forensic depth, the evidence export, or the API, that's where Oceanir pulls ahead.
GeoSolver vs Oceanir, and other questions
Yes, but the two are built for different jobs. GeoSolver (reverseimagelocation.com) is tuned for solving GeoGuessr rounds fast. Oceanir can solve game rounds too, but it is built for verification: ranked location candidates, Street View cross-checks, forensic evidence bundles, and API access for automation. If you only play GeoGuessr, GeoSolver is enough. If you need to verify a real photo, Oceanir is the better tool.
Yes. Drop a game screenshot into the uploader on this page and Oceanir returns a location estimate with coordinates and a confidence score, usually in under 30 seconds. It reads the same visual cues a skilled GeoGuessr player uses: road markings, signage script, architecture, vegetation, and vehicle plates. No GPS or EXIF metadata is required.
Oceanir adds a D3 forensic depth tier that cross-checks the predicted location against Street View using visual keypoints, produces an exportable evidence bundle with visual citations, exposes a REST API and MCP server for automation, and offers team case workflows with a shared workspace. GeoSolver focuses on giving you a fast single answer for game rounds.
Yes. D1 surface analysis is free with no credit card required, and it is more than enough to solve most GeoGuessr rounds. Paid plans start at $39/month for Pro (D3 forensic depth, PDF evidence export, API access) and $149/month for Unit (team workspace, pooled credits). You only pay when you need verification-grade output, not for casual game solving.
For real investigations (journalism, legal evidence, insurance claims, OSINT), use a tool that produces ranked candidates with confidence scores and exportable evidence rather than a single guess. Oceanir is built for that workflow: it cross-checks predictions against Street View, lets you export a forensic bundle, and supports team case management and API automation. GeoGuessr-solving tools are optimized for speed, not evidentiary rigor.