u/Dry-Candy-5365

▲ 5 r/indianstudents+2 crossposts

Hey everyone,

Like most of us right now, I’ve been staring at my marks and going down the rabbit hole of "what-if" scenarios. The rank inflation lately has been insane, and the usual PDF lists are a nightmare to navigate.

To make things easier, I built NEET Rank Compass.

It’s a simple, free tool designed to give you a realistic idea of where you stand based on current trends and historical data. No fluff, no "register to see results" traps—just input your score and get a data-backed projection.

What it does:

  • Predicts your AIR based on recent year shifts.
  • Suggests potential college cutoffs you might clear.
  • Helps you shortlist colleges for counseling before the chaos starts.

I’m trying to keep the data as updated as possible, so if you try it out, let me know if the numbers feel right or if there’s a feature you want added.

Check it out here: https://neet-rank-predictor-free.lovable.app/

Good luck to everyone—hope this makes the waiting game a little less stressful! 🤞

u/Dry-Candy-5365 — 6 days ago

Here’s a Reddit-friendly, non-promotional description that feels natural, helpful, and discussion-driven 👇

I’ve been experimenting with ways to make TNPSC current affairs prep more practical, because honestly, just reading news daily doesn’t always translate into solving questions in the exam.

One thing I noticed is that TNPSC questions are very pattern-based — factual recall, statement-based questions, match the following, and sometimes chronological order. But when we read news articles, we rarely process them in that format.

So I tried using a simple workflow where any news content (PDF, article, or even notes) is converted into multiple-choice questions. The idea is to shift from passive reading → active practice.

It’s actually quite useful for:

  • Turning long news articles into quick revision questions
  • Practicing exam-style MCQs regularly
  • Identifying what kind of facts are important for TNPSC
  • Saving time instead of manually making notes

If anyone wants to try the approach, here’s the tool I’ve been testing:
https://tnpsccurrentaffairs2026.lovable.app/

Right now it’s free to use, so I’ve just been using it for daily practice.

Curious to know how others are handling current affairs prep —
Are you making notes, revising PDFs, or practicing MCQs regularly? 🤔

u/Dry-Candy-5365 — 1 month ago