Turbo AI summarises your notes. Edapt adapts them to how you learn.
Turbo turns your files into study material fast. Edapt does that too — then reshapes every lesson around your VARK style, your country's curriculum, and what you already know.
Edapt vs Turbo AI — feature by feature
Turbo AI is an AI study tool that turns uploaded files and recordings into notes, flashcards and quizzes. It's fast and capable, but it isn't built around adaptive, curriculum-aware learning.
- Adapts to your learning style (VARK)Built-in — every lessonNot natively
- Country curriculum awarenessVCE, HSC, GCSE, AP, IB, NCEAGeneric / not curriculum-aware
- Ingest PDFs, paste & imagesYesYes
- AI notes & summariesYesYes
- Flashcards + quizzesYesYes
- Podcast / audio overviewYesYes
- Listen mode (natural TTS)Yes — natural narrationLimited
- Easy Read accessibility viewYesNo
- Spaced repetition + misconception trackingYes (SM-2)No
- FSRS-6 spaced repetitionYesNo
- 5-level mastery spectrumYesNo
- Exam-date workload forecastYesNo
- Per-subject learner memoryRemembers what you've masteredLimited
- Gamified study (Sprint, Battle, XP, coins)YesNo
- CostFree for everyone — no cardPaid tiers
Comparison reflects Turbo AI's publicly listed features as of April 2026. Turbo AI is a trademark of its respective owner; this page is not affiliated with or endorsed by them.
Why students switch from Turbo AI to Edapt
Turbo AI is a fast capture-and-summarise tool. Drop in a lecture PDF or a recording and you'll get tidy notes, flashcards and a quiz in moments. That's genuinely useful — but the output is the same for everyone. The notes a visual learner needs look nothing like what a reading-led learner needs, and Turbo hands both the same block of text.
Edapt starts from the opposite question: how does your brain actually process this? You set your VARK profile once, and every lesson reshapes itself around it — diagrams for visual learners, narration for auditory learners, structured notes for reading-led learners, hands-on tasks for kinesthetic learners. Same syllabus dot point, four genuinely different lessons.
Edapt is also curriculum-aware. Tell it once that you're studying VCE Chemistry or HSC English and every example, command term and exam-style question lines up with what your school actually marks. And because Edapt remembers what you've already mastered and tracks the misconceptions you keep hitting, each session builds on the last instead of starting from a blank page.
Common questions
Is Edapt just Turbo AI with a different theme?
No. Edapt covers the same capture-and-summarise workflow (PDFs, notes, flashcards, quizzes, audio overviews), but the core difference is adaptation: a VARK profile that reshapes every lesson, curriculum awareness for VCE/HSC/GCSE/AP/IB/NCEA, per-subject memory of what you've mastered, and a spaced-repetition queue with misconception tracking. Turbo focuses on speed of summarisation; Edapt focuses on how well you actually learn the material.
Does Edapt do everything Turbo AI does?
The everyday workflow, yes — importing sources, AI notes, flashcards, quizzes and a podcast-style audio overview are all built in. On top of that you get VARK-adaptive lessons, Listen mode with natural narration, an Easy Read accessibility view, spaced repetition, and gamified study modes (Sprint and Battle) that Turbo doesn't offer.
Why is Edapt free when Turbo AI charges?
Edapt is completely free for everyone — no plans, no caps, no credit card. You get every tool, unlimited, for $0. Turbo AI runs paid tiers for its full feature set.
I study an Australian curriculum — does that matter?
A lot. Generic study tools slip into US terminology and exam formats by default. Edapt is built around VCE, HSC and the other major curricula, so command terms, mark schemes and exam-style questions match what your teacher actually assesses — without you having to keep correcting it.
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