Honest comparison

OneMat vs Grapplearts — session structure or technique library?

Grapplearts provides hundreds of minutes of free, detailed instructional content from Stephan Kesting. OneMat structures your open mat so you actually drill and apply what you've learned. They do different jobs — here's how they compare.

Quick answer

Grapplearts (Stephan Kesting) is a deep library of BJJ instructionals—ideal for studying mechanics off the mat. OneMat is a practice layer: you pick a focus, log rolls quickly, and run 2–4 week cycles so instruction turns into mat time. Most serious grapplers benefit from both: learn on Grapplearts, execute with OneMat.

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Grapplearts

Grapplearts is an instructional platform by Stephan Kesting offering detailed technique breakdowns, drills, and conceptual videos. It excels at teaching — the "what to do" side of BJJ.

OneMat

OneMat is a structured training companion: one focus per session, ~30-second post-roll logging, and 2–4 week focus cycles. It's the "how to practice it" side — turning what you've learned into deliberate repetition.

Side-by-side

Feature-by-feature comparison

Feature-by-feature comparison: OneMat versus Grapplearts
FeatureOneMatGrapplearts
Core jobStructure your open mat with one focus + cyclesTeach techniques through video instruction
Content typeTraining plans, focus, loggingVideo tutorials, drills, concepts
Session logging~30s with chips and countersNot available
Next-session directionAI-powered focus based on your logNot available — you choose what to watch
Focus cycles2–4 week blocks with adherence trackingNot available
Technique depthBelt-filtered library, conciseExtensive — hundreds of detailed videos
Learning modePractice on the matWatch and study off the mat

Key differences

Three lenses. Same mat.

Consumption vs application

Grapplearts teaches you techniques through video. OneMat helps you practice them on the mat with a focus and a cycle — different phases of the same learning loop.

Breadth vs depth of practice

Grapplearts has huge content breadth. OneMat narrows your focus to one thing per session so you actually improve at it over 2–4 weeks.

Complement, not compete

Watch a Grapplearts video on a sweep, then set it as your OneMat focus for the next cycle. They work better together than apart.

Which one should you pick?

Choose Grapplearts if

  • You want to learn new techniques through detailed video instruction
  • You need conceptual understanding of positions and transitions
  • You prefer studying BJJ off the mat

Choose OneMat if

  • You know what to work on but need structure to practice it
  • You want your open mat sessions to build on each other
  • You need a cycle to go from "watched a video" to "reliable in sparring"

FAQ

Common questions

Should I use Grapplearts and OneMat together?
Yes — they complement each other. Learn techniques on Grapplearts, then drill and track them in OneMat's focus cycles.
Does OneMat have instructional videos?
OneMat has a technique library, but it's concise and linked to your focus — not a video instruction platform.
Is Grapplearts free?
Grapplearts offers extensive free content with some premium courses. OneMat has a free tier and paid plans for full cycle features.
Can OneMat replace Grapplearts?
No — they do different jobs. Grapplearts teaches techniques; OneMat structures how you practice them on the mat.
What should I do after watching a Grapplearts instructional?
Translate it into a measurable focus—one sweep, pass, or escape—and track reps across live rolls. OneMat is built to hold that focus across sessions instead of forgetting it after class.

Learn the technique. Then train it with focus.

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