How to Use This App for Maximum Score
Most students download this app, do a few quizzes randomly, and think they're preparing. That's like going to a gym, doing random exercises, and expecting a six-pack. This app has 10+ features, each designed for a specific stage of your preparation. If you use the right feature at the right time, your score will jump. This article is your complete strategic guide — the exact order and method to squeeze every last mark out of this app.
Feature 1-3: Daily Quiz, Topic Practice, and Notes
Daily Quiz should be non-negotiable — do it EVERY single day. It takes just 5 minutes, earns you 500 coins, and builds a streak that keeps you accountable. The questions are mixed from all subjects, which trains your brain to switch between topics quickly (exactly like the real exam). Even on days when you don't feel like studying, at minimum complete the Daily Quiz. A 90-day streak means you've practiced 900+ questions without even trying hard. Topic Practice is where the real learning happens. Don't jump around randomly — follow this order for maximum efficiency: History (Ancient → Medieval → Modern) → Polity (Constitution → Governance) → Geography (India → World) → Science (Physics → Chemistry → Biology) → Current Affairs. Why this order? History and Polity are the highest-scoring GK topics in RRB and SSC exams. Master these first.
Notes are your secret weapon — and the most underused feature. Here's the rule: ALWAYS read the notes on a topic BEFORE you attempt questions on it. Most students do it backwards — they attempt questions, get 40% wrong, feel demoralized, and then read the notes. Instead, read the notes first (10-15 minutes), then attempt the questions. You'll score 70-80% on first attempt, feel confident, and the wrong answers will stick because you had context. The notes in this app are concise, exam-focused, and cover exactly what's asked — no unnecessary textbook bulk.
Feature 4-6: Flash Cards, One-Liners, and PYQ Papers
Flash Cards are your revision engine. After you complete a topic through notes and practice, add it to your flash card rotation. The app uses spaced repetition to show you cards at the optimal time — right before you'd forget them. Spend 5-10 minutes daily flipping through flash cards. This single habit can improve your retention from 30% to 85%. One-Liners are perfect for the last 2 weeks before the exam. They're searchable, concise, and cover rapid-fire facts: "First Governor General of India = Warren Hastings." "Longest river = Nile (6,650 km)." "Article 32 = Right to Constitutional Remedies." Read 50 one-liners during your commute or before sleeping. In the exam, these quick-recall facts are easy 1-mark questions.
PYQ Papers (Previous Year Questions) are pure gold. Here's a stat that should excite you: approximately 35-40% of questions in government exams are repeated or closely based on previous years. Save PYQ practice for the last 2-3 weeks before your exam. Do one full paper every 2 days. After solving, check every wrong answer and add it to your mistake book. Don't just look at the answer — understand WHY that option is correct. The pattern of questions from PYQs tells you exactly what the exam board considers important.
Feature 7-10: Mock Tests, Marathon, Battle, and Leaderboard
Mock Tests must be treated like the real exam — period. Set a timer, find a quiet place, no phone breaks, no looking up answers mid-test. The point of a mock isn't to score high — it's to simulate exam pressure. If you score 60/100 in a mock, that's valuable data. Analyze which section took too long, which topics had the most wrong answers, and adjust your preparation accordingly. Do at least 10-15 mocks before your actual exam. Marathon Mode is for when you're confident on a topic and want rapid-fire practice. It throws questions at you one after another without detailed explanations — pure speed training. Use this 1-2 weeks before the exam to sharpen your reflexes. Aim for 80%+ accuracy in marathon mode before considering a topic "exam-ready."
Battle Mode turns boring solo study into a competition. Challenge your friends or random opponents and see who scores higher in real-time. This activates your competitive instinct, increases focus, and makes revision genuinely fun. Use it when you're feeling bored or unmotivated — one battle round can re-energize your entire study session. The Leaderboard tracks your overall progress. Check it weekly, not daily (daily checking becomes obsessive). Your goal isn't to be #1 — it's to see consistent upward movement. If your rank is improving week over week, your preparation is on track. If it's stagnant, change something in your routine.
The Ideal 35-Minute Daily Routine
Here's the routine that will crack any exam if followed for 3-6 months: 5 minutes — Daily Quiz (non-negotiable, earns coins and streak). 20 minutes — Topic Practice (read notes first, then attempt questions on one sub-topic). 10 minutes — Flash Cards or One-Liners (revision of previously completed topics). Total: 35 minutes. That's less than one episode of a web series. On weekends, add 30-40 minutes for a Mock Test or PYQ Paper. That's it. You don't need to study 8 hours a day. You need to study smart for 35 focused minutes every single day without breaks in your streak. Consistency beats intensity every time.
Open the app right now. Start your Daily Quiz if you haven't done it today. Then pick the next topic in line, read its notes, and do 20 questions. Set a reminder for the same time tomorrow. Do this for 30 days straight and I guarantee you'll see a difference in your mock test scores that will surprise even you. The app has everything you need — now use it like a topper would.