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How to Use Rezzy to Study Smarter for NEET-PG and USMLE in 2026

Master medical exams with Rezzy AI tutor. Learn 6 game-changing features that help NEET-PG and USMLE students study more efficiently, retain better, and score higher in 2026.

Cover: How to Use Rezzy to Study Smarter for NEET-PG and USMLE in 2026

How to Use Rezzy to Study Smarter for NEET-PG and USMLE in 2026

It's 11 PM. You're three chapters into pharmacology, trying to understand why ACE inhibitors cause a dry cough. You've got your textbook open, three YouTube tabs running, a Google search for "ACE inhibitor mechanism," and ChatGPT open in another window where you're trying to explain your confusion.

Thirty minutes later, you're more confused than when you started.

There's a better way.

Meet Rezzy — your AI study companion built specifically for medical exam preparation. Unlike switching between multiple apps and losing your context every time you need help, Rezzy lives inside your study materials and always knows exactly what you're learning.

What is Rezzy?

Rezzy is Oncourse's AI tutor that transforms how medical students prepare for NEET-PG, USMLE, INICET, and other medical exams. The key difference? Rezzy always knows what you're currently studying.

When you're on a lesson about beta blockers, Rezzy sees that lesson. When you're stuck on a pharmacology question, Rezzy sees both the question and your answer. When you're reviewing your notes, Rezzy knows the exact topic you're working on.

No more copying and pasting. No more re-explaining context. Just tap, ask, and get the help you need in seconds.

Comparison of traditional medical study methods versus using Rezzy AI for streamlined learning

6 Ways Rezzy Transforms Your Medical Exam Preparation

Complete guide to Rezzy AI features for medical exam preparation

1. Ask Rezzy — Get Instant Help Without Losing Your Place

The Problem: You're reading about cardiac glycosides when you hit a confusing concept. You switch to Google, spend 10 minutes searching, get distracted by other topics, and lose your focus completely. The Solution: Every lesson in Oncourse has a small "Ask Rezzy" button. Tap it, and a chat window slides up. Rezzy already knows you're studying cardiac glycosides — just ask your question directly. Real Example: You're studying digoxin's mechanism and see "inhibits Na+/K+ ATPase pump" but don't understand how this leads to increased contractility. Just type: "How does inhibiting the sodium-potassium pump increase heart contractility?"

Rezzy explains the mechanism step by step, connecting Na+/K+ pump inhibition → increased intracellular sodium → reduced calcium extrusion → increased contractility. All without leaving your lesson page.

Why This Helps You Pass: No context switching means no lost momentum. You solve confusion instantly and keep studying, rather than falling down internet rabbit holes.

2. View As — Reformat Any Content for How Your Brain Works Best

The Problem: Some topics make perfect sense as flowcharts, others as comparison tables, others as mnemonics. But textbooks give you everything in paragraph form, regardless of what works best for that specific concept. The Solution: The "View As" feature instantly restructures any lesson content into six different formats:

  • Flowchart — Perfect for mechanisms and step-by-step processes

  • Table — Ideal for comparing drugs, diseases, or symptoms side-by-side

  • Mnemonics — Great for memorizing lists and complex information

  • Diagram — Visual relationships made clear with text-based diagrams

  • High Yield — Strips content down to exam-essential facts only

  • Full Notes — The complete detailed explanation

Real Example: You're studying renal physiology and the tubular handling of sodium. The lesson covers eight different mechanisms across four parts of the nephron. Switch to Flowchart view, and suddenly you see a clear logical sequence: Proximal Tubule → Loop of Henle → Distal Tubule → Collecting Duct, with each step's specific sodium handling mechanism clearly laid out. Why This Helps You Pass: Different concepts need different learning approaches. A tired brain at midnight wants High Yield facts, not full paragraphs. A complex mechanism needs a Flowchart, not prose. Rezzy adapts the format to match how your brain wants to learn in that moment.

3. Voice Mode — Study While Commuting, Cooking, or Lying Down

The Problem: Medical exam prep requires hundreds of hours. But you can't always be staring at a screen — you're commuting, exercising, cooking, or your eyes are too tired for more reading. The Solution: Tap the voice button in Rezzy and switch to completely hands-free studying. Speak to Rezzy out loud, and it responds with spoken audio. Have full conversations, request explanations, or do rapid-fire verbal quizzes. Real Example: You're on a 20-minute commute to your hospital rotation. Put in your earphones, open Rezzy, tap voice mode, and say: "Quiz me on the side effects of aminoglycosides."

Rezzy asks: "What's the most serious side effect of gentamicin affecting the ears?"
You answer: "Ototoxicity."
Rezzy responds: "Correct! Now, which type of ototoxicity is more common — cochlear or vestibular?"

Twenty minutes of productive revision during time that would otherwise be wasted.

Why This Helps You Pass: Voice mode doubles your effective study time. Every commute, every walk, every moment when your eyes need a break becomes potential revision time. Active verbal recall also strengthens memory more than passive reading.

4. Mnemonic Challenge — Daily Memory Tests That Actually Stick

The Problem: You read mnemonics passively and think you know them. "MUDPILES for metabolic acidosis causes — yeah, I've got this." But under exam pressure, your mind goes blank. The Solution: Daily Mnemonic Challenges present you with a memory aid clue and blank letter boxes. You have three attempts to complete it correctly before the timer runs out (resets daily at midnight). Real Example: Today's challenge is Cushing's syndrome causes. You see:

  • P___ (Pituitary adenoma)

  • A___ (Adrenal adenoma)

  • I___ (Iatrogenic - steroid use)

  • N___ (Non-endocrine ACTH)

First attempt: You get three out of four. Second attempt: You remember "Non-endocrine" but can't recall it's specifically ACTH-secreting tumors. Third attempt: You nail all four and feel that satisfying click of permanent memory formation.

Why This Helps You Pass: Failed attempts followed by success create stronger memory traces than passive reading ever could. The timer pressure simulates exam conditions. Missing the mnemonic and seeing the correct answer creates the "aha moment" that cements it permanently.

5. Personalized Daily Plan — No More Decision Fatigue or Uneven Preparation

The Problem: The biggest failure mode for medical exam prep is uneven studying. You become strong in favorite subjects while dangerous gaps develop in topics you avoid. You also waste precious time every day deciding what to study. The Solution: Oncourse tracks your progress across all subjects and generates a personalized daily study plan. Each day targets two subjects:

  • Momentum Subject — One you're progressing well in, to maintain your streak

  • Rotation Subject — One you've been avoiding, to prevent weak areas from piling up

Choose your session intensity:

  • Light — 1 lesson + 27 flashcards (quick revision days)

  • Regular — 1 lesson + 20 flashcards + 10 exercises + 20 previous year questions

  • Deep — 1 lesson + 1 video + 20 flashcards + 12 exercises + 40 questions

Real Example: You've been crushing pharmacology but completely avoiding forensic medicine for three weeks. Today's plan pairs a pharmacology lesson (momentum) with a forensic medicine topic (rotation). Follow the plan for two weeks, and forensic medicine transforms from a gap subject into manageable content. Why This Helps You Pass: Eliminates decision fatigue — open the app and your study plan is ready. Forces balanced preparation across all subjects. Prevents the exam day nightmare of being strong in 70% of topics but completely lost in the other 30%.

6. Context Cards — Never Lose Track of Your Learning Journey

The Problem: Medical exam prep involves hundreds of micro-study sessions. You close the app, come back later, and have no idea where you left off or what you were working on. The Solution: After every Rezzy conversation, a context card appears showing exactly what content you were discussing (lesson title, question number, topic area). The card persists even after closing the app. Real Example: Yesterday evening you had a great discussion with Rezzy about hepatitis B serology patterns while studying a specific infectious diseases lesson. This morning, you open the app and see the context card showing "Hepatitis B Serology - Infectious Diseases Lesson 4." One tap takes you right back to that exact lesson. Why This Helps You Pass: Nothing gets lost in your study journey. You can pick up exactly where you left off, maintaining continuity and preventing the frustration of "What was I working on yesterday?"

Who Should Use Rezzy?

Rezzy works best for medical students who are:

  • Preparing for NEET-PG, USMLE Step 1/Step 2 CK, INICET, FMGE, or UKMLA in 2026

  • Tired of studying hard without seeing score improvements — you're putting in hours but your practice test scores aren't budging

  • Frustrated with juggling multiple apps and resources — bouncing between YouTube, textbooks, question banks, and ChatGPT

  • Struggling with passive reading that doesn't translate to MCQ performance

  • Dealing with uneven preparation — strong in some subjects, dangerously weak in others

  • Looking for active recall and spaced repetition built into their daily routine

Rezzy integrates seamlessly with Oncourse's comprehensive question banks, NEET-PG lessons, USMLE practice questions, and medical flashcards to create a complete exam preparation ecosystem.

Rezzy vs. Traditional Study Methods

Traditional Approach

Rezzy Approach

Switch between 5+ apps when stuck

Ask questions without leaving your lesson

Copy-paste context to ChatGPT

Context already known — just ask

Passive reading of textbooks

Interactive discussions and explanations

Generic study plans

Personalized daily plans based on your gaps

Static content format

Dynamic formatting (flowchart, table, mnemonic)

Screen-only studying

Voice mode for hands-free learning

Passive mnemonic reading

Active recall challenges with timers

Getting Started with Rezzy

Ready to transform your medical exam preparation? Here's how to get started:

1. Download Oncourse on your phone (iOS or Android)
2. Create your free account — no credit card required for the free tier
3. Start with a lesson in your weakest subject area
4. Try the "Ask Rezzy" feature when you hit your first confusing concept
5. Experiment with "View As" to find your preferred learning format
6. Set up your first Daily Plan to establish consistent study habits

The free tier gives you access to Rezzy with limited daily chats, plus access to thousands of medical lessons, questions, and flashcards. Premium unlocks unlimited Rezzy conversations, full personalization features, and access to the complete question bank.

Transform Your Medical Exam Preparation Today

Stop wasting time switching between apps and losing your place every time you need help. Rezzy keeps you in flow state, adapts to how your brain learns best, and ensures balanced preparation across all exam topics.

Join thousands of medical students who've already discovered that studying harder isn't the answer — studying smarter with AI is.

Try Rezzy free at getoncourse.ai →

Your future medical career deserves the best preparation tools available. In 2026, that means studying with AI as your personal tutor — available 24/7, never judgmental, and always ready to help you understand complex medical concepts.

The question isn't whether AI will change medical education. It's whether you'll use it to get ahead or get left behind.