Simplicity for · Students

An AI that helps you study, not just answer.

Between lectures, readings, and assignments, most students don't need another flashy AI app — they need something that helps them concentrate and actually get through the work. Simplicity's Study mode and document tools are built around exactly that.

Study sessions with fewer distractions

Turn on Focus mode's Study level before a study block and Simplicity dims the interface, starts a visible timer, and keeps its own responses tighter and more direct — closer to a study partner than a chatbot. An inline dictionary lookup means you don't have to open a new tab just to check a word.

Essays and assignments that stay editable

Ask for a draft — an essay, a summary, a set of notes — and it opens in a dedicated editor canvas rather than sitting as plain text in the chat. You can revise it together with Simplicity or edit it directly, and it's saved as a reopenable draft you can come back to.

Reports and slides for group projects

Need a project report or a presentation deck? Simplicity generates a real, downloadable PDF or PowerPoint file with proper structure and formatting — not just a wall of text you have to reformat yourself before turning it in.

Frequently asked questions

Is Simplicity free for students?

Simplicity is currently in early access — sign up to get access as it rolls out. There's no separate student pricing tier required to use the core chat, focus mode, or document tools.

Can Simplicity help me write essays?

Yes. Ask for an essay or a draft on any topic and it opens directly in an editable canvas — you can revise it back and forth with Simplicity or edit it yourself, and it stays saved so you can reopen it later.

What is Study mode?

Study is one of Focus mode's three levels, built specifically for learning sessions — it dims distractions, runs a session timer, and adds an instant dictionary lookup so you can check an unfamiliar word or term without leaving the page.

Can it explain concepts, not just answer questions?

Yes — Simplicity is built to be direct and clear rather than padded with filler, which makes it well suited to breaking down a concept step by step when you're trying to actually understand something, not just get an answer.