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Honest tips from the people who set the prices

Make your credits count

We designed the credit system, so we know exactly how to squeeze the most learning out of every rupee. Here's everything — no secrets kept.

The biggest secret: long questions cost the same as short ones

Most students don't know this. Now you do.

A question costs the same number of credits whether you write one line or twenty. So never shorten your question to "save credits" — you'd be saving nothing and getting a worse answer. Give the full problem, what you tried, and where you got stuck. One rich question beats three vague ones — and the three vague ones cost 3× more.

12 credits, frustrated"explain projectile motion" → generic answer → "no I mean the range part" → still generic→ "with an example from past papers please"
4 credits, sorted"In 2023 A/L Physics MCQ 14, a ball is launched at 30° with 20 m/s. I calculated the range as 35.3 m using R = u²sin2θ/g but the answer says 35.3 m is wrong. Where is my mistake? Show the working."

Pick the right brain for the job

This is where most credits get wasted — or saved.

Lite
4 credits
Your daily driver — explanations, definitions, past-paper practice, checking answers. Tuned for A/L. Right for ~9 out of 10 questions.
Bright
25 credits
When Lite's answer didn't crack it, or the problem needs multi-step reasoning — tricky mechanics, organic chemistry mechanisms, hard maths proofs.
🎓
Prof
45 credits
The heavy artillery. One Prof question = 11 Lite questions, so save it for the genuinely brutal ones — and ask it with full detail.
The golden rule: start with Lite. If the answer doesn't get you there, ask the same well-written question on Bright. Going straight to Prof for a definition is like hiring a professor to read you the textbook.

Use your daily questions — every day

The habit is worth more than the credits.

Your daily allowance resets every morning at 5:30 AM and unused daily questions don't pile up — so the winning strategy is simple: ask something every single day. On the Free plan that's 8 questions a day — about 240 free questions a month if you show up daily. Even 3 good questions after each study session compounds into a massive advantage by exam time.

On paid plans, your monthly credits are yours to spend at your own pace — and even if you somehow use them all, you still keep the free 8-a-day until your month ends. A paid month never goes dark.

These cost nothing — use them shamelessly

Credits are only for AI questions. Everything else is free, always.

  • Recent past papers and exam practice — the 4 most recent exam years are free; attempt them as many times as you want. (Older and latest-year papers come from the question marketplace — and anything you buy is yours for your whole account life.)
  • File uploads — notes, papers, diagrams
  • Re-reading old chats — your past AI answers are a free personal textbook; check there before re-asking
  • Exports and reports — download your results anytime

Power move: before asking, search your old chats. You may have already paid for that answer once — don't pay twice.

Smart moves with packs & renewals

A little planning goes a long way.

  • Wallet credits never expire — buy a pack before exam week, not during a midnight panic. They also work past your daily limit, exactly when you need them.
  • Bigger packs carry bonuses — ₨1,000 gives 8% extra credits compared to buying small.
  • On Pro, Max and Ultimate: renew within 3 days of your month ending and your unused credits carry over (up to a full extra month's worth). That's free money — don't let it lapse.
  • Renewing early never wastes days — your new 30 days start when the old ones finish. Renew whenever it's convenient.

Write questions that earn their credits

The quality of the answer follows the quality of the question.

  • One concept per question — "explain SN1 vs SN2 and also equilibrium and also this MCQ" gets a shallow answer to all three
  • Include the actual problem — paste the full question, the numbers, the options
  • Show your attempt — "I got X by doing Y, but the answer is Z" gets you a diagnosis, not a lecture
  • Say what you want back — "explain like I'm revising", "just the working", "give me a similar question to practice"
  • Start a fresh chat for a new topic — answers stay sharper when the conversation stays on one subject
Why we're telling you all this

Helping you spend fewer credits per concept might look like bad business. It isn't. A student who feels their money respected stays, learns, and tells their friends. That's the whole plan — you doing well IS our business model.