Each exercise targets a different cognitive system. Together, they build a complete memory foundation.
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Iconic Memory
Quick Training
Your brain captures images like a camera shutter โ in fractions of a second. Quick Training sharpens that split-second snapshot. You're shown 1โ3 shapes or symbols for a brief moment, then must find them among 12 options. Adjust display time and image count to push your limits.
"Trains the photographic memory layer most apps ignore entirely."
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Working Memory
Pair Cards
The classic memory game โ reimagined for serious training. Memorize a grid of cards, then flip them to find matching pairs. Customize the number of cards, display time, and choose between pairs or triplets. The more you play, the better your brain holds multiple pieces of information at once.
"Working memory is the foundation of focus, learning, and decision-making."
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Spatial Memory
Object Placement
Where did I park the car? Where did I leave my keys? Object Placement trains your brain to "photograph" space. Study a layout of objects, then recreate their positions from memory. This targets topographic and episodic memory โ the systems that let you navigate and remember real-world locations.
"Teaches your brain to build mental maps of the world around you."
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Verbal-Visual Thinking
Visualization
Words become pictures. Read a text description of where objects are placed โ "motorcycle in top left, bicycle in center, airplane on right" โ then recreate the scene from memory without looking. This unique exercise bridges language and spatial reasoning, building the constructive imagination that great memorizers rely on.
"You won't find this exercise in any other memory app."
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Long-Term Memory
Long Training
Real memory isn't tested seconds later โ it's tested hours later. Choose an image, text, or number sequence to memorize. Then set a reminder for 1 to 12 hours. When the time comes, the app tests you. This simulates how real memories form: through the space between encoding and recall. The only exercise of its kind.
"The sleep between learning and testing is where real memory lives."