About PSS360
Three simulators. One platform. Built for public-safety education.
PSS360 began as three separate training tools — a 911 dispatch typing trainer, an AI dispatch console, and an avatar-based roleplay simulator. Each solved a real problem for the academies that used it. None of them talked to each other.
We unified them: one login, one roster, one record of every trainee’s progress across all three. Instructors stopped juggling tools and logins, and trainees got a single place to build the full communications skill ladder — from the keyboard, to the console, to the field.
The focus has never changed: the part of public-safety work that’s hardest to practice is the calls and the conversations. PSS360 gives trainees a safe, structured, measurable place to build those skills — with AI-driven feedback — before the real world tests them.
The skill ladder
From the keyboard to the field — one continuous climb.
- 01
Dispatch Typing Simulator
A 911 dispatch typing trainer — WPM and accuracy drills, dictation, CAD narrative practice, and scenario scoring across six difficulty levels.
Learn more - 02
Dispatch360
An AI-powered 911 dispatch console — trainees answer AI-driven emergency calls, run a full CAD system, and coordinate radio traffic before the real call comes in.
Learn more - 03
Guardian360
Avatar-based roleplay for law-enforcement and public-safety CTE pathways — practice de-escalation and communication with responsive AI role-players.
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What we believe
Practice the part that’s hard to practice
The calls and conversations — not the paperwork — are where public-safety work is won or lost. Those are exactly the reps PSS360 makes repeatable.
A safe place to fail
Trainees get a controlled environment to make mistakes, get feedback, and try again — with no real-world stakes and no one on the other end of a real emergency.
Feedback you can measure
Every attempt produces transcripts, scores, and coaching notes — so progress is visible to the trainee and to the instructor, not a gut feeling.
Built for how academies teach
Rosters, assignments, review queues, and exports are first-class — aligned to CTE and academy pathways, not bolted on after the fact.
Team, mission detail, and credibility content to follow.