Early access · ADC Written Exam prep

Learn to think like an Australian dentist.

Reviz is your AI study partner for the ADC Written Exam. All subjects. Adaptive learning. Available 24/7, right inside WhatsApp.

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All subjects
Complete ADC coverage
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Adaptive AI
Learns your weak spots
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Remy never sleeps
What's missing

What's missing from your prep.

01 The midnight doubt

It's 11 PM. Something doesn't click.

Your tutor's next session is Thursday. The coaching group chat has 200 people — you're not asking there. So you move on. The doubt stays.

With Reviz

Remy answers in seconds — any topic, any time. Even at 11 PM on a Sunday.

02 The question you never asked

Everyone in your batch seems to get it. You don't.

You're not going to ask a "basic" question in front of thirty people. So you stay quiet. You Google it. You get five different answers from five different countries.

With Reviz

No batch, no judgment. Ask the same thing five times — Remy explains it five different ways until it clicks.

03 The tutor who can't remember

Your tutor has forty students.

They don't remember that you got warfarin wrong three times. They don't know you're strong on pain management but weak on antibiotic prophylaxis. They teach the same thing to everyone.

With Reviz

Remy tracks every answer, every mistake, every pattern — and silently adjusts your entire study plan around your gaps.

"The promise

Every answer is sourced directly from the prescribed textbooks. No guessing. No conflicting sources. No five-different-answers-from-Google. The books say it, Remy teaches it. Nothing else.

What if your study partner remembered everything, judged nothing, and was available right now?

Meet Remy
How Remy teaches

What Remy actually does.

01

Clinical cases

A patient walks in. You make the calls. Remy grades your thinking.

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02

The 'why' question

You got it right. But do you know why? Remy asks the question that proves you actually understand.

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03

Teach it back

Remy plays confused. You explain until it clicks. If your explanation has a gap, Remy finds it.

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04

The trap

Deliberately tricky cases designed to surface your blind spots. The correction sticks harder than getting it right.

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05

The story you won't forget

A 3-line clinical vignette at 8 AM. Thirty seconds. No response needed. You'll remember it months later.

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See it in action
Clinical case · Anticoagulants

A 58-year-old patient on warfarin (INR 2.8) presents for extraction of tooth #36. She also takes aspirin 100mg daily.

What is your first step before proceeding?
AStop warfarin 3 days before extraction
BCheck INR is ≤3.0 and proceed with local measures
CRefer to haematologist
Clinical case · Anticoagulants

A 58-year-old patient on warfarin (INR 2.8) presents for extraction of tooth #36.

AStop warfarin 3 days before extraction
BCheck INR is ≤3.0 and proceed with local measures
CRefer to haematologist
Remy
Not quite. Stopping warfarin before a simple extraction is the old protocol. Current guidelines say INR ≤3.0 is safe to proceed with local haemostatic measures. The correct approach is B.
Mastery update
Warfarin management 42%

Misconception logged"stopping warfarin before simple extraction"

Next review: tomorrow — different scenario, same concept.

Day 2 · Adaptive review
Clinical case · Anticoagulants

A 72-year-old patient on warfarin needs a surgical extraction of an impacted wisdom tooth. His INR is 3.4.

How do you proceed?
AProceed — INR is close enough
BPostpone until INR drops to ≤3.0
CStop warfarin for 48 hours, then extract
Day 2 · Adaptive review
Clinical case · Anticoagulants
AProceed — INR is close enough
BPostpone until INR drops to ≤3.0
CStop warfarin for 48 hours, then extract
Remy
Exactly right. INR 3.4 is above the safe threshold — postpone and recheck. You've corrected yesterday's misconception. This one's locked in now.
Warfarin management 68%
Your knowledge state
Updated after every answer.
Acute Pain Management88%
Local Anaesthetics74%
Warfarin Management68% ↑ +26
Medical Emergencies55%
Antibiotic Prophylaxis42%
Oral Mucosal Disease31%

Remy sees all of this. Every day, the plan reshapes around what you need most.

A real clinical case — not a multiple-choice from a textbook. The student makes the calls.

Remy doesn't just say "wrong." It explains the current guideline and corrects the specific misconception.

Every mistake is tracked — not just wrong or right, but the specific wrong answer. Tomorrow's cases will target this exact gap.

Same concept, harder case. Remy is testing whether yesterday's correction stuck — from a different angle.

The concept strengthens. Remy will test this again in 5 days, then 14, then 30. Spaced until it's permanent.

No two students have the same experience. Your weak spots get more attention. Your strong areas fade to maintenance.

Clinical case · Anticoagulants

A 58-year-old patient on warfarin (INR 2.8) presents for extraction of tooth #36.

What is your first step before proceeding?
AStop warfarin 3 days before extraction
BCheck INR is ≤3.0 and proceed with local measures
CRefer to haematologist

A real clinical case — the student makes the calls.

Clinical case · Anticoagulants
AStop warfarin 3 days before extraction
BCheck INR is ≤3.0 and proceed with local measures
CRefer to haematologist
Remy
Not quite. Stopping warfarin before a simple extraction is the old protocol. Current guidelines say INR ≤3.0 is safe with local haemostatic measures.

Remy explains the current guideline and corrects the specific misconception.

Mastery update
Warfarin management 42%

Misconception logged"stopping warfarin before simple extraction"

Next review: tomorrow.

Every mistake is tracked. Tomorrow's cases will target this exact gap.

Day 2 · Adaptive review
Clinical case · Anticoagulants

A 72-year-old patient on warfarin needs a surgical extraction. His INR is 3.4.

How do you proceed?
AProceed — INR is close enough
BPostpone until INR drops to ≤3.0
CStop warfarin for 48 hours, then extract

Same concept, harder case. Did yesterday's correction stick?

Day 2 · Locked in
AProceed — INR is close enough
BPostpone until INR drops to ≤3.0
CStop warfarin for 48 hours, then extract
Remy
Exactly right. You've corrected yesterday's misconception. This one's locked in now.
Warfarin management 68%

The concept strengthens. Remy will retest in 5 days, then 14, then 30.

Your knowledge state
Updated after every answer.
Acute Pain Management88%
Local Anaesthetics74%
Warfarin Management68% ↑ +26
Medical Emergencies55%
Antibiotic Prophylaxis42%
Oral Mucosal Disease31%

Remy sees all of this. Every day, the plan reshapes around what you need most.

850 knowledge units. All tracked. All adaptive. All from the prescribed textbooks.

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