MathGPT.today AI Math Explanations, Step-by-Step Videos, Flashcards, and a New Kids Mode
Hi everyone, I built MathGPT.today. I built it because I went through years of math classes where everything moved too fast. You sit in a lecture hall with 300 people, the prof runs through one easy example, and then the homework is ten levels harder. By the time you’ve formed your question, class is already over.
MathGPT.today came out of that frustration. I wanted a tool that slows down, shows every step, and lets you ask “why?” without feeling embarrassed or rushed.
Today the platform can break down problems step by step, generate short AI videos that explain concepts visually, and build automatic flashcards from your solutions so you can actually review and remember what you learned.
I recently added MathGPT Kids for grades 1–8 a more visual, friendly mode with simpler language, emojis, and guided steps. A lot of younger students are finding us now, so this felt important.
I’m also experimenting with game-style learning: mini-quests, badges, and practice streaks that make math feel less intimidating and more like progress you can see.
The goal isn’t to just hand out answers. It’s to help students genuinely understand why each step works and build real confidence whether it’s late at night before a quiz or during a tough homework session.
Would love feedback or thoughts from the HN community.
https://mathgpt.today has now solved 103,814+ questions, helped 33K+ students, and reached learners in 206 countries.
Grateful for the growth — and excited for what's next.
AI Math Help Made Simple.
umeedsto•1h ago
Hi everyone, I built MathGPT.today. I built it because I went through years of math classes where everything moved too fast. You sit in a lecture hall with 300 people, the prof runs through one easy example, and then the homework is ten levels harder. By the time you’ve formed your question, class is already over.
MathGPT.today came out of that frustration. I wanted a tool that slows down, shows every step, and lets you ask “why?” without feeling embarrassed or rushed.
Today the platform can break down problems step by step, generate short AI videos that explain concepts visually, and build automatic flashcards from your solutions so you can actually review and remember what you learned.
I recently added MathGPT Kids for grades 1–8 a more visual, friendly mode with simpler language, emojis, and guided steps. A lot of younger students are finding us now, so this felt important.
I’m also experimenting with game-style learning: mini-quests, badges, and practice streaks that make math feel less intimidating and more like progress you can see.
The goal isn’t to just hand out answers. It’s to help students genuinely understand why each step works and build real confidence whether it’s late at night before a quiz or during a tough homework session.
Would love feedback or thoughts from the HN community.
https://mathgpt.today/
umeedsto•58m ago