For doctors preparing for NEET PG (again).
A different way to prepare for NEET PG. Each cycle is a real exam slice, scored to find your patterns. Run as many cycles as the months before exam day will allow. The first one takes about 30 minutes.
No signup, takes about 30 minutes.
A 62-year-old man with atrial fibrillation is started on amiodarone. Six months later, he develops dyspnea on exertion and a dry cough. Which adverse effect is most likely?
You have read explanations for hundreds of questions you got wrong. They are filed and forgotten by Tuesday. Falx does something different with the wrong answer.
By Tuesday
You remember the score.
You do not remember which three you got wrong, or why.
By Tuesday
Three wrong, one cause.
You have already worked on the cause.
The explanations were never the problem. The pattern beneath the wrong answers was.
The exam does not test one subject at a time. It hands you a vignette, asks one question, and expects you to bring three subjects to answer it. Falx questions are built the same way.
When you sit the real exam, the rhythm should already be familiar. That is what every Falx cycle is for.
A Falx question is not a fact-checker. It is a probe. Every line in the stem and every wrong option is engineered to surface a particular kind of confusion in your reasoning.
Not a topic. Not a fact. A specific way smart people get an answer wrong. The kind that recurs across years and across students.
Pick option A and Falx already knows what you confused with what. That is how a 50-question ritual returns a real reading instead of just a score.
Written from the ground up to test reasoning, not to repeat what you have already seen five times on social media. The ritual only works if the questions can still surprise you.
Each cycle is built around your specific answers, not a syllabus written before you signed up. Each cycle teaches Falx more about how you read questions, so the next one finds the gaps the last one missed.
Falx reads your first 50 answers and finds your top three reasoning traps. Your plan focuses on only those.
It picks new questions to test what the last cycle changed, and the ones you still get for the same wrong reason.
Your gap-map is a map of how you think, not what you forgot. Closed gaps stay closed. New ones surface and get worked through.
By the sixth cycle, your Falx knows your reasoning better than your last study group did. There is no second copy of it.
Knowing you got it wrong was never the problem. Knowing why it felt right was. Falx names that for every wrong answer you give. After 50 questions, the shape of your failure is hard to miss.
The ritual finds which of these you keep falling into. Most repeaters fall into two.
Pick any option. Falx will tell you, in plain words, what your answer reveals about how you read the question. That is where the learning happens.
A 45-year-old man with a long history of ulcerative colitis presents with chronic bloody diarrhea. Colonic biopsy shows non-caseating granulomas with transmural inflammation. Which condition has most likely developed?
Pick an answer to see what Falx reads.
After 50 questions you get a ranked map of the exact concept patterns costing you marks. By subject. By error type. With the wrong options you picked, and what each one means.
Antiarrhythmic look-alikes
Inflammation cascades
NBME-style framing
Post-op management edges
Gram-negative differentials
Sample readout. Yours will be generated from your actual 50-question ritual. Different subjects, different patterns, different practice.
Preparation is not a syllabus you finish. It is a loop you run. Read, focus, run it again. Falx is the loop.
About 30 minutes. Fifty questions across all 19 subjects. See what is actually broken, not what is most-revised.
Seven days of focused practice on the specific reasoning patterns the ritual found. Nothing else.
Run the ritual again. See exactly what shifted, what did not, and where the next cycle starts.
Every two to three weeks until the exam. Gaps close. Rank moves. No part of this is hopeful.
This is preparation as a feedback loop.
The content is wherever you already study. Falx is the loop you run it through.
We will treat preparation as a loop, not a syllabus.
We will not sell you another long list of things to memorise.
We will tell you what is wrong.
We will not sell you another course on what is right.
We will tie every practice session to a textbook reference.
We will not pad your plan with generic revision material that could fit anyone.
We will let you delete everything in one click.
We will not sell your data, not now, not ever.
You already paid for the questions. Pay ₹999 for the diagnosis those questions never gave you.
₹999 buys your first cycle, no auto-renewal. After it completes, continuing monthly access opens at the same price. Cancel any time. No lock-in, no annual prepay.
No signup needed. Takes about 30 minutes.
What you do now tells you that you got a question wrong. Falx tells you why you keep getting it wrong. That is the difference between marking your own paper and having someone who knows your reasoning read it back to you. After 50 questions you walk into your next study session with names for your three sharpest gaps, not just a number for your score.