You pick a topic, choose how many questions you want and the difficulty level, and the AI generates multiple-choice questions. Each question comes with a detailed explanation after you answer. The whole process takes about 10 seconds.
Questions are generated fresh every time. You won't see the same set repeated because the AI creates them from scratch based on your topic. If you're studying calculus, the questions will cover derivatives, integrals, or limits depending on what you ask for.
There's a timer for each question if you want to practice under exam conditions. You can pause it or turn it off entirely. After you finish, you get a breakdown of which questions you got right, which ones you missed, and why the correct answer is correct.
The quiz generator covers over 500 topics across eight categories: programming, mathematics, science, history, languages, business, arts, and medical sciences. Anything from Python data structures to organic chemistry reaction mechanisms to World War II history.
If your topic isn't in the preset list, type it in directly. The AI checks whether it can generate meaningful questions for that subject before it starts. This prevents you from getting generic or off-topic questions.
Testing yourself on material is one of the most effective study methods. Cognitive psychology research shows that retrieving information from memory strengthens that memory far more than reviewing notes passively.
When you take a quiz and get a question wrong, your brain pays closer attention to the correct answer. This is called the testing effect. The mistake makes the right answer more memorable than it would have been if you had just read it in a textbook.
Self-testing also gives you an honest picture of what you actually know. Students often overestimate how well they understand material until they try answering specific questions about it.
Start with the difficulty level that matches your current understanding. If you're reviewing basics, go with Easy. Preparing for a competitive exam? Set it to Hard. The questions scale accordingly.
Take quizzes on the same topic across multiple sessions rather than doing everything in one sitting. Spreading your practice over several days helps with long-term retention.
Pay attention to the explanations after each question, especially the ones you got wrong. The AI provides context for why each answer is correct, and that context fills in gaps you might not even know you had.