Starting a side project means learning twenty things you've never done before—all at once. You need design principles one day, basic marketing the next, maybe some psychology to understand users. Most learning apps assume you're going deep in one subject. But when you're building something new, you need breadth first.
That's where daily quizzes make sense. Ten questions each morning give you little hooks across business, tech, psychology, history, science. One question might spark exactly what your project needs. Another plants a seed for three months from now. You're not cramming for a test—you're building a broader mental toolkit.
The streak tracker matters more than you'd think. When your project feels stuck, that 🔥 keeps one thing moving forward. Questions adapt as you improve, so you're always working at the edge of what you know. And the leaderboard? Turns out a little friendly competition makes learning feel less like homework.
You don't need another course that takes weeks to finish. You need a habit that grows your knowledge in the margins—waiting for code to compile, riding the train, first coffee of the day. Small questions, daily practice, real progress. See what you know, then know a bit more tomorrow.