Revizer for UPSC
The AI study buddy for UPSC aspirants.
Drop NCERTs, Laxmikanth, Spectrum, Vision IAS monthly CAs, or newspaper summaries and Revizer turns them into voice-driven revision sessions. The only way to keep a two-year syllabus alive in one head.
Why UPSC CSE revision breaks.
Every upsc aspirants we've spoken to hits the same walls. Revizer is built around these walls, not around them.
A syllabus that forgets faster than you finish it
By the time you reach Modern History, Ancient India has quietly drained away. Passive revision cycles don't fix this — retrieval does, at the right interval.
Current affairs that never stop moving
Vision monthlies, The Hindu, PIB, Yojana. Twelve months of issues and most aspirants can recall maybe three. The problem isn't input — it's revision.
Mains answer writing vs prelims trivia
Prelims needs crisp recall. Mains needs structured retrieval under time pressure. You need both drills — ideally in the gaps your prep day already has.
A UPSC session, end to end
Vision monthly → CA recall → Stays in the head.
Drop CA brief
Vision / ForumIAS / Insights monthly, PIB summary, Hindu notes.
Facts + framing
Names, dates, schemes — plus the Mains framing.
Answer aloud
Walk-through answers while cooking, walking, commuting.
Spaced return
Last month's CA resurfaces before you forget it.
How Revizer fits the UPSC CSE grind.
NCERT + standard books as voice sessions
Laxmikanth on polity, Spectrum on modern history, Shankar IAS on environment — upload any of them and Revizer builds a voice-first revision session tuned to the source.
Current affairs on the commute
Paste a Vision or ForumIAS monthly compilation or PIB summary. Revizer quizzes you on facts, dates, and policies while you walk, commute, or cook. CA retention is the bottleneck — this attacks it.
Mains answer structure drills
Upload a GS question bank or past paper. Revizer asks you to build the answer out loud — intro, body, conclusion — and gives feedback on structure, not just facts.
Prelims PYQ drills with explanation
Paste 10 years of Prelims PYQs. Revizer quizzes you in a spaced-repetition cycle and explains the nuance behind every trap option — the reason the wrong answer looked right.
UPSC CSE syllabus
Seven moving parts. One revision rhythm.
- GS IHistory · Geography · Society
- GS IIPolity · Governance · IR
- GS IIIEconomy · Environment · S&T
- GS IVEthics · Integrity · Aptitude
- OptionalSubject of choice
- CSATAptitude · Comprehension
- Current AffairsHindu · PIB · Vision · ForumIAS
What you can drop in.
Revizer turns whatever study material you already have into a voice-driven revision session — no flashcard-writing step.
- NCERTs Class 6–12 (history, polity, geography, economy, science)
- Standard books: Laxmikanth (Polity), Spectrum (Modern History), Shankar IAS (Environment), Ramesh Singh (Economy)
- Vision IAS, ForumIAS, Insights monthly current affairs compilations
- PIB press releases, Yojana and Kurukshetra summaries, Hindu editorial notes
- Past prelims PYQs and mains question papers (GS I–IV, Optional, CSAT)
Question styles you'll see.
Polity · Constitutional Provisions
Explain the difference between Fundamental Rights and Directive Principles of State Policy, with one example each of a judicial pronouncement on their interaction.
Modern History · Independence Movement
What were the key resolutions of the Lahore Congress Session (1929), and why is this session considered a turning point in the freedom struggle?
Environment · Conservation
Differentiate between a Biosphere Reserve, a National Park, and a Wildlife Sanctuary in terms of legal status, human activity, and IUCN categorisation.
Economy · Monetary Policy
What is the difference between CRR and SLR, and how does the RBI use each to influence liquidity in the banking system?
From upsc aspirants using Revizer.
Was sceptical about voice revision but it works surprisingly well for current affairs. I answer while cooking dinner. Changed how I revise for UPSC.
Ananya NairUPSC CSE · DelhiLaxmikanth on voice in the morning, Vision monthly in the evening. After two months my prelims mocks stopped oscillating and actually trended up.
Siddharth PandeyUPSC Aspirant · LucknowWorking full-time, prepping for UPSC is impossible without a revision layer. Revizer is that layer. Nothing else I tried survived contact with an actual workday.
Meera BhattacharyaUPSC Working Pro · Kolkata
UPSC CSE — common questions.
Is Revizer good for UPSC Prelims, Mains, or both?
Both. Prelims is a recall problem, which Revizer handles natively. Mains needs structured answer-building drills — upload past mains questions and Revizer walks you through answer structure, not just facts.
Does Revizer cover current affairs?
Revizer works on whatever current-affairs material you upload — Vision monthlies, ForumIAS, PIB summaries, newspaper notes. Retention is the hard part and that's exactly what active recall is for.
Can I use Revizer for Optional subjects?
Yes. Optional prep is heavy on retrieval and structure. Upload your Optional notes or standard texts and Revizer generates sessions around them.
How do I use Revizer alongside Vision / ForumIAS / Insights?
Use Revizer as the revision layer on top of your existing material. Your coaching provides input; Revizer turns it into retrieval practice, which is the step most aspirants skip.
Can Revizer help with ethics (GS IV)?
Ethics benefits from case-based recall and structured answer writing. Upload past ethics questions or your notes and Revizer drills the case-study response format.
I'm a working-pro UPSC aspirant — is it worth it?
Voice-first, short sessions, works while commuting — Revizer is arguably more useful for working pros than for full-time aspirants. Revision is the half of prep that always gets squeezed; this restores it.
Stop re-reading. Start remembering.
Revizer is free to start. Install, upload one chapter, and see how a single 15-minute session feels different from an hour of re-reading.
Get Revizer on Play StoreOther exam paths