Make flashcards, then study them with tap-to-flip and a "got it / again" loop that recycles the ones you miss. Saves in your browser. Free.
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💾 Your deck saves in this browser — build it over the term, study it before the exam.
Flashcards force active recall — dragging the answer out of memory instead of nodding along to notes — and recall practice is the most consistently proven study technique there is. The "Again" button is where the magic lives: missed cards recycle to the back of the queue and keep returning until you get them, so a session automatically spends your time on exactly what you don't know yet. One clear fact per card ("Year Federation happened → 1901") beats a paragraph crammed onto one card.
Build cards as you learn each topic rather than the night before — a term of small additions makes exam week a review, not a rescue. Slot short deck-runs into your Study Planner evening blocks, and let the Revision Timetable Builder decide which subject's deck each day belongs to.
How many cards should a deck have?
Whatever the topic needs, but study in bursts of 15–30 cards. The recycle loop naturally extends a session until the missed cards are mastered.
What makes a good flashcard?
One question, one fact, no compound answers. If the back needs three sentences, split it into three cards — small cards get answered; big cards get skimmed.
How does the study loop work?
Cards are shuffled; tap to flip; "Got it" retires the card for the session, "Again" sends it to the back of the queue to reappear. The session ends when every card has been got.
Is my deck saved?
Yes — in this browser on this device, automatically. It's never uploaded, and clearing browser data deletes it.
Can I make multiple decks?
The tool keeps one deck, so use a subject prefix on the front ("BIO: ...", "HIST: ...") if you're mixing subjects — or master one subject's deck, delete, and build the next.