How PhysicsGraph Compares

Honest comparisons with other learning platforms. We believe in transparency—see exactly where we excel and where others might be a better fit.

PhysicsGraph vs Math Academy

Our inspiration for adaptive learning

We love Math Academy - they pioneered the knowledge graph approach to learning. See how PhysicsGraph expands the vision for Mastery Learning throughout the curriculum.

PhysicsGraph vs Khan Academy

A great supplemental resource

Khan Academy is a great resource with lots of useful videos. However, PhysicsGraph uses more effective learning techniques, and goes deeper into high school and university level topics.

PhysicsGraph vs Albert.io

Tests you on physics. Doesn't teach it.

Albert.io is a question bank. It assumes you already learned the material somewhere else. No lessons, no spaced repetition, no adaptive learning — just questions and explanations after you get them wrong.

PhysicsGraph vs UWorld

The same test-prep formula applied to every subject

UWorld made their name in medical licensing exams. AP Physics is one of 15+ AP subjects inside a company that also covers law and finance. The result is a generic "Watch, Read, Practice" product — not a physics learning platform.

PhysicsGraph vs Fiveable

Disconnected study tools, not a learning system

Fiveable has study guides, practice questions, and FRQ grading — but none of them talk to each other. No adaptive learning, no spaced repetition, no system. You're the glue holding it together.

PhysicsGraph vs Brilliant

Great for curiosity. Not built for serious physics learning.

Brilliant's interactive lessons and visualizations are genuinely impressive — one of the best ways to build physics intuition. But it's designed for exploration, not mastery. It has no structured curriculum, no FRQ practice, and no adaptive system to close your gaps.

PhysicsGraph vs Princeton Review

$6,000 and a guarantee full of asterisks

Princeton Review's "Score a 5 or your money back" guarantee only refunds 25% if you score a 4 — meaning they keep $4,500 if you come close. Read the fine print before spending six thousand dollars on a single AP exam.

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