- Video course
+50XP
Math Secrets: How to Predict What Happens Next
Sunflowers know a number sequence that took mathematicians centuries to figure out. Your TikTok feed is powered by vectors and similarity scores. Every game you play runs on hidden formulas that decide your loot, your damage, and your odds. Even your maps are lying to you — Africa is 14 times larger than Greenland, but you'd never know from looking at one. You don't need to be "good at math" or know any formulas — just bring your curiosity. By the end, **you'll be the person who sees what others miss**: the math hidden in music, the geometry in broccoli, the probability behind every "lucky" moment. That's not a school skill — that's a superpower. 25 short video lessons (5–7 min each), each one starting with a question that sounds impossible — like "Why is a hexagon the perfect shape?" or "Do computers actually have randomness?" — and answering it with real science, wild metaphors, and zero textbook energy. You test yourself after every lesson and see results right away.
Universe
What you’ll learn
Numbers are running the show
Discover the hidden numbers in flower petals, music chords, video game balance, and your TikTok feed. You'll see how Fibonacci, fractions, and algorithms shape things you use every day — and learn to spot when statistics are lying to your face.
Geometry you never noticed
Find out why bees solved a math problem 100 million years before humans, why broccoli is technically infinite, and why every world map is wrong. You'll see shapes, fractals, and the golden ratio in places you never expected — and understand why your brain falls for optical illusions.
Luck is a math problem
Learn why your "winning streak" is an illusion, why switching doors doubles your odds (even though it feels wrong), and why 23 people in a room almost guarantees a birthday match. You'll never trust your gut on probability again — and that's a good thing.
Scales that break your brain
Wrap your head around the 27 zeros inside your body, a number (π) that never ends, infinities that come in different sizes, and distances so vast that even light takes years. By the end, you'll understand why math isn't a school subject — it's the language the universe speaks.