Enter the subject you want to learn, your current level, and where you want to end up. The AI creates a structured learning path with milestones, estimated timeframes, and recommended resources for each step.
Each milestone breaks the subject into manageable pieces. Rather than facing a topic like "machine learning" as one block, you get a sequence of smaller goals: linear algebra basics, Python fundamentals, supervised learning algorithms, and so on.
Timeframes are based on your stated availability. A three-month roadmap assumes regular daily study. A six-month plan spaces things out more. The AI doesn't promise unrealistic timelines.
Every roadmap has a clear progression from foundational concepts to advanced material. Prerequisites are mapped out so you know what to learn first and what builds on what.
Each milestone includes the specific skills you will gain and a set of recommended resources: articles, video tutorials, practice exercises, and quizzes you can take directly on Rune.
Difficulty labels on each milestone help you gauge how challenging each step will be. Beginner milestones cover fundamentals. Intermediate milestones introduce complexity. Advanced milestones tackle specialized material.
Overambitious timelines are the most common reason people abandon learning goals. The roadmap generator builds in realistic pacing and assumes you won't study every single day.
If you want to learn a programming language from scratch, expect to spend at least two to three months of consistent practice before you feel comfortable writing code on your own. The roadmap reflects this honestly.
You can adjust your timeframe if the generated plan feels too fast or too slow. The roadmap is a starting point, not a rigid schedule. Modify it based on how your actual learning progresses.
Mark milestones as complete when you finish them. This gives you a visual record of how far you have come and what is left ahead.
The roadmap connects directly to other Rune tools. Generate quizzes for each milestone to test your understanding, or create flashcards to memorize the key concepts from that section.
Reviewing your completed milestones is surprisingly motivating. When you are stuck on a hard section, seeing everything you have already finished can push you to keep going.