Study ly · brand confirmation

You searched study ly. The product is one word: Studyly.

This is the page that disambiguates the brand for the people who half-remember the spelling. If you Googled study ly, study.ly, studdyly, or any of the other variants, you are looking for studyly.io. What follows is what the product actually does, what the 81.3 number on the homepage means, and the answers to the questions a brand-search visitor usually has before signing up.

M
Matthew Diakonov
7 min read

Direct answer · verified 2026-05-05

What is study ly?

Studyly (one word, at studyly.io) is a practice-question generator. You upload a lecture slide deck, a textbook PDF, or a YouTube lecture; about 60 seconds later you have roughly 200 multiple-choice questions, plus matching free-response prompts, case-style stems, and image-occlusion flashcards. Every question is grounded to a specific slide or page in the file you uploaded, not pulled from a generic web question bank.

The output scores 81.3 on a held-out three-document quality eval (factual correctness, clarity, distractor quality, and question-type coverage), versus Unattle 78.0, Gauntlet 68.0, and Turbolearn 57.8. Methodology is on the quality page.

Why people type the brand as two words

The brand is the verb 'study' with the adverbial suffix '-ly' glued to the end. Visually, '-ly' is a token your eye reads as a separate word, the way 'flow' separates from 'web' in 'webflow' or 'chimp' separates from 'mail' in 'mailchimp'. So the two-word search variant arrives in Google Search Console without anyone deliberately mistyping anything; it is what a brand name shaped like Studyly looks like when typed quickly.

There is no separate study.ly domain. The dotted form is also a common variant because users assume the suffix might be a country-code TLD. It is not. The product lives at studyly.io, and after you sign up the in-app surface lives at app.jungleai.com (Jungle is the underlying platform that powers the question-generation pipeline; the studyly.io site is the lecture-deck-focused front door for ~7,000 new student signups per week).

Anchor fact · the part you cannot fake

Wrong-answer feedback names the slide.

Most quiz tools, including the LLM-generic ones, return a string when you miss: the right answer plus a paragraph of explanation that may or may not trace back to your source. In Studyly, the explain panel on a missed question carries structured fields: the deck filename, the slide number, the verbatim quote from that slide, the right answer, your answer, and the reason the distractor you picked is plausible but wrong.

The 'open slide 23' link in that response jumps you to the exact slide in your uploaded file. You spend a few seconds re-reading the source, not skimming 90 slides looking for context. This is the loop that makes a brand-name product different from a thin LLM quiz wrapper, and it is the part of the product that does not show up in a screenshot.

The shape of the explain response

Below is the JSON shape returned by the explain panel when you get a question wrong. The slide number is the part that makes the response useful: you are not reading a generic clarification, you are reading the line from your professor's deck that you missed, with a one-click way back to that slide.

explain_response.json

What separates Studyly from a generic AI quiz tool

Same input file, different behavior. The differences below are why a brand-search visitor often arrives here looking for the specific tool a classmate recommended.

FeatureGeneric LLM quiz toolStudyly
Question sourcePretrained or web question bankGenerated from your uploaded slide / PDF / video
Wrong-answer behaviorGeneric 'try again' messageVerbatim quote from the source plus slide number
Revisit behaviorSame stem on every repeatStem reworded across MCQ, fill-in, case, inverse-select
Image-heavy decksFigures stripped, fact lostImage-occlusion card with the labeled structure masked
Held-out eval (factual + clarity + distractors + coverage)57.8 (Turbolearn)81.3
Anki escape hatchOften locked-in.apkg export including image-occlusion cards

Where the brand sits in the field

The closest comparison points students bring up are Quizlet, Anki, Brainscape, Mindgrasp, StudyFetch, and Turbolearn. The bigger of those (Quizlet, Anki) are flashcard surfaces with large pre-existing libraries. The newer ones (Mindgrasp, StudyFetch, Turbolearn) are LLM-quiz tools that take a file in and return questions out, similar in shape to Studyly.

The held-out eval treats those LLM-quiz tools as the like-for-like comparison. Studyly scored 81.3, Unattle 78.0, Gauntlet 68.0, Turbolearn 57.8 on the same three documents graded against the same four criteria. The full leaderboard and the rubric definitions live on studyly.io/quality.

Anki remains the right tool if your workflow is built around owning the cards in a local database forever. The .apkg export is the supported bridge: you can use Studyly to do the hour-of- flashcard-making in 60 seconds, then ship the deck (image- occlusion cards included) into your existing Anki collection.

Who actually uses it

Roughly 1 million students use the underlying app that studyly.io gates traffic to. About 7,000 new students sign up per week. The dominant verticals are medical school, dental school, nursing, pharmacy, vet, PA programs, and pre-med, plus biology, anatomy, immunology, and microbiology majors. The common factor is a course where exams are written from a professor's slide deck, and the cost of not having drillable practice questions is hours of manual flashcard typing.

The two onboarding personas the product is built for are the academic optimizer (uploads each deck the same day the professor releases it, drills five minutes a night) and the cramming procrastinator (drops 30 PDFs the day before the exam and needs drillable practice in under five minutes). The gamification layer (one tree per deck, weekly leagues with classmates) is what makes the five-minute floor stick where most spaced-repetition apps lose users by week two.

Sign up · free tier, no credit card

Drop a slide deck. Get drillable questions in about a minute.

The email gate sends a one-click access link via Resend and redirects you to the in-app workspace. One welcome email, no marketing spam.

Brand-search questions about Studyly

Is it 'study ly', 'study.ly', or 'Studyly'?

It is one word, Studyly, at studyly.io. The two-word and dotted spellings are common search variants because the brand name is the verb 'study' with the suffix '-ly' attached. There is no separate study.ly domain that resolves to the product. If you typed 'study ly' into Google and landed on this page, you are in the right place.

What does Studyly actually do to a file I upload?

Drop a PDF, PowerPoint, scanned textbook, or YouTube link in. About 60 seconds later you get roughly 200 multiple-choice questions, plus matching free-response prompts, case-style stems, and image-occlusion flashcards (anatomy diagrams and labeled microscopy with the structure masked). Every generated question is tagged to the slide or page it came from, which is how the explain panel on a wrong answer can quote the source back at you and name the slide number.

What is the 81.3 score the product page mentions?

It is the average score on a held-out three-document quality eval graded across four criteria: factual correctness, clarity, distractor quality, and question-type coverage. On the same eval, Unattle scored 78.0, Gauntlet 68.0, and Turbolearn 57.8. The full methodology and per-criterion definitions are on the quality page. The same rubric runs at revisit time as a quality gate so the auto-rephrasings on each repeat session do not drift.

Why two words? Is 'study ly' a typo?

It is the most common typo of the brand, but Google still routes those searches to the right place. People type it as two words for the same reason 'mail chimp' and 'web flow' get typed as two words: the suffix reads as a separate token at a glance. The product is consistently spelled Studyly across the site, the email-gated welcome message, and the underlying app at app.jungleai.com that Studyly hands you off to once you sign up.

Who is Studyly built for?

Memorization-heavy programs with dense lecture decks and exams written from those decks. The active power-user verticals are medical, dental, nursing, pharmacy, PA, vet, pre-med, biology, anatomy, immunology, and microbiology. It works for history, literature, and law concept questions too. It is not the right tool for step-by-step computational problems (calculus integration, physics worked solutions, dose-calculation arithmetic).

Is there a free tier?

Yes, freemium with no credit card required. The Get Started flow on this page collects your email, sends a one-click access link via Resend, and redirects you to app.jungleai.com (Jungle is the underlying platform Studyly is built on; the Studyly site is the lecture-deck-focused surface). One welcome email, no marketing spam.

Where does the question come from when I drill?

From the file you uploaded, never from a generic web question bank. This is the part that distinguishes Studyly from quiz tools that rerank a pretrained question pool. If your professor put the term 'septomarginal trabecula' on slide 23 of the cardiology deck, that becomes a question grounded to slide 23, not a generic anatomy question pulled from the open web. The 'explain my mistake' panel on a wrong answer cites the slide back at you with its number, so you can re-open the deck on that slide.

Can I export to Anki?

Yes. The flashcard format is one-click exportable to .apkg, including the image-occlusion cards generated from anatomy diagrams. If you prefer Anki's review schedule to the in-app one, the export is the supported escape hatch.

How is this different from dropping the file into ChatGPT and asking for questions?

ChatGPT will write questions. It will not enforce a quality rubric on what it returns, it will not track which questions you have already gotten right, it will not reword the stem on revisit so you cannot pattern-match the answer, and it will not surface a verbatim quote from your file when you miss. On the same held-out eval, Studyly scored 81.3 versus 57.8 for Turbolearn, the closest pure-LLM-quiz competitor.

What is the daily routine that the product is designed for?

Five minutes a night, on the deck the professor handed out that day. The five-minute floor matters more than the duration: each lecture deck grows its own tree, and the tree only moves forward when you get the underlying fact right across rewordings, not when you answer the same question twice. By exam morning the screen looks like a forest with one tree per deck, so bare branches tell you which lectures still need a final pass.