Comparison

Cram vs Wisdolia

Wisdolia is a clever browser extension: hit a button on any article, PDF, or YouTube video and its AI produces a set of flashcards you can save or export to Anki. It's excellent for turning web reading into cards on the spot. Cram takes a different shape — a native iPhone app that turns your material into a deck and gives you a proper spaced-repetition review flow, online or off.

Both use AI to generate cards. The difference is what happens next: Wisdolia is a generator that lives in your browser; Cram is a full study app you review in, on your phone.

Download on the App StoreFree trial · iPhone

Cram vs Wisdolia at a glance

Cram compared with Wisdolia, feature by feature
FeatureCramWisdolia
AI generates your cards
Yes
Yes
From PDFs, notes, links & topics
Yes
PartialArticles, PDFs, YouTube (web content)
Spaced repetition
Yes
PartialReview in-app or export to Anki for scheduling
Cloud sync & backup
Yes
PartialAccount-based; browser-first
Study offline
Yes
NoBrowser extension; connection-dependent
No ads
Yes
Yes
Platforms
iPhone
Chrome extension / Web
Pricing
Free trial, then subscription
Free; Pro ≈ $2.50/moApprox. (~$25/yr) — verify on wisdolia.com

Competitor details are approximate and current as of June 2026. Always check Wisdolia's official site for the latest pricing and features.

What is Wisdolia?

Wisdolia is an AI flashcard generator that runs as a Google Chrome extension. From any article, PDF, or YouTube video it creates a handful of question-and-answer cards you can review in Wisdolia or export to Anki for spaced repetition. It's browser-first and web-based, with a free plan (limited monthly generations and PDF/video length) and an inexpensive Pro plan for unlimited use.

Where Cram stands out

A study app, not just a generator

Wisdolia's job is to make cards; serious review often means exporting to Anki. Cram generates the cards and gives you the spaced-repetition review and exam countdown in one place — no second app.

Native iPhone, offline

Wisdolia lives in a desktop browser and leans on a connection. Cram is an iPhone app whose decks are on your device, so you can review on the go with no signal.

More kinds of input

Wisdolia shines on web pages, PDFs, and YouTube. Cram also takes your own typed notes, pasted text, photos or scans of notes, and any topic — the sources students actually have on their phone.

Private by design

No ads, no data-selling, and your study material is never used to train AI models.

Where Wisdolia stands out

Instant cards while you browse

Wisdolia's in-browser button is genuinely handy — turn an article or a YouTube lecture into cards without leaving the page. For desktop web research, that's a real workflow advantage.

Anki export

If you already live in Anki, Wisdolia can feed cards straight into it. Cram doesn't export to other apps.

A very cheap Pro tier

Wisdolia's paid plan is inexpensive for unlimited generations. If your only need is making cards from web content, that's strong value.

Choose Cram if

iPhone users who want a full study app — AI decks from their own material plus offline spaced-repetition review — not just a card generator.

Choose Wisdolia if

People who do a lot of desktop web reading and want to turn articles, PDFs, and YouTube videos into cards on the spot, then review in Anki.

The verdict

Choose Wisdolia to turn web articles, PDFs, and YouTube videos into cards from your desktop browser, especially if you review in Anki. Choose Cram for a native iPhone app that builds decks from your own material and gives you offline spaced-repetition review in one place.

Turn your notes into a deck in seconds

No ads, offline review, synced to your account. Built for cramming.

Download on the App StoreFree trial · iPhone

Cram vs Wisdolia: FAQ

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