What is XP in Studieasy?
XP (experience points) is the in-app currency you earn for studying. It measures total effort across every session you have ever finished, regardless of subject or study set. You earn XP automatically — no claim button, no daily login bonus. Study, get smarter, level up.
How to earn XP
Each correct answer in a session is worth 5 XP. Finishing a session with a score of 80% or higher adds a 20 XP bonus on top. A typical 10-question session at 80% accuracy earns 60 XP; a perfect 20-question session earns 120 XP. There is no daily cap.
How levelling works (and why it speeds up early)
Studieasy uses a concave progression curve designed around a simple principle: the first few levels should feel rewarding fast so new students stay motivated, while higher levels should feel meaningful so long-term learners have something real to work toward. The XP needed to reach level L is roughly 50 × (L − 1)^1.6 — gentle for beginners, demanding for veterans.
The levelling table at a glance
Level 2 takes 50 XP (about one short session). Level 3 takes 152 XP. Level 5 takes around 460 XP — a productive afternoon. Level 10 lands at roughly 1,575 XP, a solid week of study. Level 20 sits near 5,108 XP, around a month of consistent practice. Level 50 needs about 25,940 XP, the equivalent of a full semester of dedicated learning.
Why the curve is shaped this way
Levels 1–5 fly by because the early dopamine matters: it is the moment a new learner decides Studieasy is "their" app. Levels 5–20 reward the daily habit-formation window — each level takes a few days to a couple of weeks of regular study, which lines up with how memory consolidates. Levels 20+ are a real flex: thousands of correct answers across hundreds of sessions, profile-worthy and earned.
The daily streak: how it works
A streak is the number of consecutive days you have studied on Studieasy. It is the most direct measure of your study habit, and it is the single biggest predictor of long-term learning success. To grow your streak, finish at least one study session each day. That is the whole rule.
The 24-hour grace period explained
Real life happens — travel, sleep, bad days. Studieasy has a built-in 24-hour grace period so a single missed day never wipes out weeks of effort. Stated precisely: your streak stays alive as long as your next study session begins within 48 hours of your previous one. That is the equivalent of "study every day, with 24 hours of slack on top."
Worked examples
Last session Monday 10am, next session Monday 8pm: maintained (same day). Last Monday 10am, next Tuesday 9am: streak goes up by one — new day, within grace. Last Monday 10am, next Wednesday 9am: still within 48 hours, streak goes up by one. Last Monday 10am, next Wednesday 11am: streak resets to one because the 48-hour window has closed.
Why a 24-hour grace and not 48 or 72?
Longer grace windows feel kinder in surveys but quietly kill the daily-habit signal: students learn that missing today has no real cost, and the streak stops being a behavioural lever. 24 hours is the sweet spot — forgiving enough to absorb the occasional bad day, strict enough to keep the discipline that makes streaks work in the first place.
How the streak is shown
Even if you have not opened the app since yesterday, the dashboard updates in real time. Within 48 hours of your last session, your active streak is displayed in orange with the flame icon lit. Past 48 hours, the counter shows zero immediately — even though your historical longest streak is preserved on your profile. You can never be misled into thinking your streak is alive when it is not.
Your longest streak is forever
When an active streak ends, your longest streak ever stays on your public profile and on your dashboard stats permanently. The active streak is about today’s discipline; the longest streak is about who you are as a learner. Both matter, in different ways.
How XP, levels, and streaks fit together
These three systems are independent on purpose. XP measures total effort. Level measures cumulative progress on a curve that respects both new and veteran learners. Streak measures present-day consistency. You could be a level 30 learner with a one-day streak (returning after a long break) or a level 4 learner with a 50-day streak (just starting out, but disciplined). Together they paint an honest picture of you as a student.