How it works
Lecture deck in,
200 questions out.
Sixty seconds.
- 81.3
- Question-quality score. Turbolearn scores 57.8 on the same eval.
- 60s
- From a 90-slide deck to two hundred questions.
- 1M+
- Students drilling on the underlying app.
01
Drop in your professor's slide deck
Lecture slides, PowerPoint, PDFs, scanned textbooks, YouTube lectures, study guides, handwritten notes. One source or thirty in a folder. The questions come from your actual course material, not a generic web question bank.
02
Get four question formats
Multiple-choice with realistic distractors, free-response prompts, case-style scenarios, and image-occlusion flashcards for anatomy. From the same source. Editable. Exportable to Anki.
03
Drill with auto-rephrasing
Every revisit, the question wording changes. You can't pattern-match on the first three words anymore. Spaced repetition runs in the background.
04
Explain mistakes from the source
Click 'explain my mistake' on any wrong answer. Studyly references the original PDF or slide and shows you exactly why your answer was wrong, with a quote from the source.
05 / Five minutes a night
The mechanic that makes the
habit stick.
A study tool that you only open the night before the exam is a cramming tool. Studyly works as that, too. But the bigger payoff is twenty minutes a night, every night, with something to look at. Each deck grows a tree. By week two it has leaves.
The tree is the only piece of the experience that's slow on purpose. Questions come in 60 seconds. Drills take 5 minutes. The tree takes two weeks. That gap is the point: the daily habit needs a reason to come back, and a finished tree is a better reason than a streak count.
Walk past your laptop the morning of the exam and it looks like a forest, one tree per deck. The Optimizer persona, the student who actually wants to study every night, is who Studyly is built for. The Procrastinator persona is who it works for anyway.
06 / Weekly leagues
Promotion is the carrot.
Not points.
Every Monday Studyly seeds you into a cohort of 30. Top 15 by questions answered get promoted. The rest regroup. Five tiers, named for things that grow: Sprout, Fern, Banana, Palm, Canopy. Same loop Duolingo runs on, applied to drilling.