Quizlet is great for cramming. Tomo is for actually learning it.
Quizlet is a fast way to drill flashcards for a test. Tomo turns a topic into a structured, gamified course with a clear path, so you build real understanding five minutes a day, not just memorize for Friday.
For learning you want to keep, not dump after the exam.
Free during early access · No credit card · iPhone & Android
What Quizlet gets right
Make a set fast, or grab one of millions already made, and drill it before an exam.
Flashcards, Learn, Test, and a matching game keep drilling from getting stale.
Magic Notes turns your notes or slides into flashcards in seconds.
If you've got a test Friday and a list of terms to memorize, Quizlet is the right tool. Tomo is for when you want to understand a topic and keep it.
Where Tomo fits instead
Sections, levels, and a clear path, so you're not hunting for a stranger's set.
Quizzes that explain, inside a course that builds up.
The five-minute loop that brings you back, pointed at what you're curious about.
Type a topic and Tomo builds the whole course in minutes.
Quizlet vs Tomo, honestly
Use Quizlet to cram terms for a test. Use Tomo when you want a topic to actually stick.
Questions people actually ask
Is Tomo a Quizlet alternative?
If you want to genuinely learn a topic rather than drill flashcards for a test, yes. For pure memorization of a term list, Quizlet is purpose-built.
Does Quizlet teach you, or just quiz you?
Quizlet drills cards you or others make. Tomo builds a structured course that teaches the topic and quizzes you as you go, so it builds understanding, not just recall of a list.
Can I learn any subject on Tomo like Quizlet?
Yes, any topic you can type. The difference is Tomo generates a full guided course, not a deck you have to find or build.
Can I use both Quizlet and Tomo?
Sure. Quizlet to cram a term list, Tomo to actually learn the subject it came from.
Is Tomo free?
Yes. Free during early access, no credit card.
Learn it, don't just cram it.
Type any topic and Tomo builds the course. Free during early access.