One source. Six ways to learn it.

Pick Balanced, Deep dive, Crash course, Exam prep, Practice, or Fast learning — one click, and the same source becomes a plan aimed at your goal: more depth, just the essentials, or exam-focused.

The core move

Same source. Pick your angle.

A preset is one click when you start a plan — and the whole path aims where you point it.

  1. Step 1

    One click, before the plan builds.

  2. Step 2

    Aimed at mastery — every mechanism, in depth.

  3. Step 3

    Or aimed at the essentials — the 20% that carries the idea.

Same chapter, aimed two different ways. Change your goal, not your source.

The gap

A textbook is written one way, for everyone.

A source doesn't care what you need. It hands the same depth to someone mastering it cold and someone who just needs the gist — so one learner drowns in detail, and another skims right past what they had to nail.

You should be able to aim it at what you're here for.

Still Ritsu

The preset shapes the plan. Everything else is still yours.

changes: what the plan emphasizes

The same path of Points of Knowledgenever changes — bite-size, in the order they build on
The same ~40 learning commandsnever changes — on every single point

A preset decides what your plan emphasizes — depth, essentials, exam-readiness, practice. What it doesn't change is everything that makes Ritsu Ritsu: the same path of Points of Knowledge, with the same ~40 learning commands on every one of them. You're aiming the plan, not trading away the tools.

Questions

What people ask before they pick a preset.

No — they're six one-click presets over the same plan generator. Each just steers what the plan emphasizes.

Your source. Your way in.

Bring a source, pick how you want to learn it, and let Ritsu build the plan to match.