How drills work
A drill is a real chart, a single question, and a forced decision before the answer is shown. The platform is built around them.
Every drill follows the same shape. You see a real chart at a specific moment in time. You read the structure. You answer the question, which is usually one of: where's the entry, what's the bias, where does the stop go, is this a setup or a skip.
Once you commit to your answer, the platform shows you what actually happened on the next candles, and explains why the answer was what it was. There's no penalty for guessing on day one. The drills measure your current read, not your confidence.
Why drills, not videos
The cognitive science is unambiguous: retrieval beats re-reading for long-term retention. Watching a video produces a feeling of fluency that decays in a week. Making a decision and seeing the outcome builds a memory that lasts. Drills are the smallest unit of forced retrieval we could build.
Wrong answers are part of the loop
Wrong drills feed the adaptive queue. The platform tracks which concepts you keep getting wrong and surfaces similar setups in the next session. By the time the same concept comes around again, the gap will be measurably smaller. That's the system working.
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