The MDCAT is a strange exam. One hundred and eighty questions, one hundred and eighty minutes, and for most Pakistani students it quietly decides where the next several years of their life will happen. There is no second sitting to fall back on. It is a one-shot exam.
We built MDCAT Ready because most of what a student can reach for during those tense few weeks doesn’t respect that. There are long video courses that eat time, apps that treat every subject as equally important, and question banks with answer keys you can’t fully trust. Under real pressure, on a phone that might be offline on the bus, none of that helps you answer one more question correctly.
So we started from a single purpose: maximise the student’s MDCAT score. Not watch time, not streaks, not engagement. Every screen in the app has to earn its place by answering one question — will this help the student get one more MCQ right on exam day? If it doesn’t, it isn’t there.
Study where the marks are
The idea that shapes everything is simple: your study should be weighted by exam-day marks, not by treating subjects equally. Biology alone is 45% of the MDCAT — 81 of 180 questions. A weak Biology topic is worth more than a weak Physics topic because it carries more marks. The app is built to keep pointing you at exactly that, right from the home screen.
Trust is the whole thing
Because this is a paid, one-shot product, a fabricated statistic or a wrong answer key isn’t a small blemish — it costs a real student real marks. We hold a hard line on it: if a fact isn’t sourced, it stays blank. Progress you haven’t earned isn’t shown as earned. The numbers in the app are honest floors, not marketing.
That’s the whole product, really. Be ready — calmly, honestly, and with your time spent where it counts.