Study Plan
A simple learning routine for market vocabulary.
Crypto Term Game is built for short, repeatable study sessions. The goal is not to chase market calls. The goal is to recognize how crypto, finance, and AI terms fit into real workflows: custody, reserves, routing, risk, data, evaluation, and automation.
The daily routine
The strongest way to use the site is to keep the learning loop small. A reader should be able to open the daily board, test their current vocabulary, review the answer logic, and leave with one clearer distinction. That is more useful than scanning a long list of terms without context.
1. Play the board before reading definitions
Start with the daily puzzle and make your first guess from pattern recognition. This shows which words already feel connected and which ones only look familiar.
2. Review the answer logic
After solving or using the answer page, read the category summaries. The important lesson is why four terms share a role, such as reserve coverage, execution routing, model evaluation, or permission control.
3. Open one related guide
Choose one unfamiliar theme and read a learning guide instead of trying to memorize every card. A focused guide gives the surrounding context that a short puzzle answer cannot cover.
4. Write one distinction in your own words
End by naming one contrast: collateral versus reserve, prompt versus retrieval, market order versus limit order, or human approval versus policy engine. Distinctions make vocabulary stick.
A one-week beginner path
This plan is designed for readers who see market and AI terms in dashboards, product pages, newsletters, or research notes but do not want trading advice. Each day focuses on recognition and comparison rather than prediction.
- Day 1: Play the current board and review all four answer groups.
- Day 2: Read one beginner guide from the Learn page and replay a previous archive puzzle.
- Day 3: Pick five glossary terms and explain what each term is not.
- Day 4: Focus on AI workflow terms such as prompt, retrieval, evaluation, and guardrails.
- Day 5: Focus on crypto risk terms such as collateral, reserve, liquidation, and oracle.
- Day 6: Compare exchange and market-structure terms such as order book, spread, routing, and slippage.
- Day 7: Replay two archived boards and note which categories are now easier to recognize.
What to measure while learning
Do not measure progress only by whether the puzzle was solved perfectly. Better signals are whether you can explain why a card belongs in one group, why a similar card does not belong there, and where the term might appear in a real interface or article.
For example, reserve coverage and collateral both involve backing value, but they show up in different contexts. Retrieval and prompt both influence an AI answer, but one brings outside information into context while the other gives instructions. A useful study session makes those boundaries easier to see.
Safe learning boundary
Market language can be attached to risky products. This site keeps the boundary explicit: vocabulary pages are not recommendations, exchange rankings, portfolio guidance, or trading signals. If a term appears in a puzzle, it appears because it helps readers understand language, not because the site endorses an asset or strategy.
Start here
Use today's board as the first lesson.
Play the current puzzle, check the answer logic, then choose one glossary term or learning guide to review. Repeat tomorrow with a new board.