Watch your mastery fill in,
concept by concept.
As you study, Ritsu scores every concept in your source from 0 to 100 — so you see at a glance what you've truly mastered and what's still shaky. Reading nudges the number; practice makes it climb.
The core move
Every concept, with a number on how well you know it.
Not a wall of text about how you’re doing — a number, per concept, that you earned.
- Step 1
Every concept in your source, scored 0 to 100.
- Step 2
Practice a concept, and its bar climbs — reading alone never gets it there.
- Step 3
The low bars tell you exactly where to go next.
The gap
The hardest thing to judge is what you don’t quite know.
Read a chapter and everything feels roughly equal — a warm blur of “yeah, I've seen this.” But from the inside, a rock-solid idea and one that's one exam question from falling over feel exactly the same.
That blur is where studying goes wrong: you re-read what you already know and skip what would've cost you the grade.
You need to see it from the outside.
How a score is earned
Mastery is earned, not read.
Your score can't be fooled. Skimming a page can't fake it, and re-reading can't inflate it — the only way a number climbs is to use the idea and get it right. So the panel isn't measuring how much you've seen. It's measuring what you can actually do.
Just reading
Nudges it, then stops
A concept's score doesn't jump just because you read about it. Reading moves it a little — then it stops. Recognition isn't the same as knowing.
Actually using it
Makes the bar climb
Answer a quiz, work an exercise, explain it and get graded — use the idea, and the number reflects it. Show you can do it, and the bar climbs.
And once a concept is solid, it stays solid — the score only ever moves up. What you've earned is yours.
Your next hour
Stop guessing what to revise.
each weak concept carries a shortcutstraight back to it
The panel doesn't just grade you — it points. No more re-reading the whole chapter to find the two ideas that didn't stick.
What feeds it
Every command you run makes the panel smarter.
one document, one clear picture — the map covers the source you're studying
The ~40 commands aren't just for learning — they're how the map learns you, one Point of Knowledge at a time.
Questions
What people ask about the Map.
No — it's a panel that scores every concept in your source from 0 to 100. Clear and honest: a number per idea, not a web of lines.
See your understanding, not just your notes.
Start a session, study, and watch each concept earn its score.